summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/77862-0.txt
blob: 9eca3cb6b9050734ef4641fa3ff2f1d42b69d313 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
758
759
760
761
762
763
764
765
766
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
775
776
777
778
779
780
781
782
783
784
785
786
787
788
789
790
791
792
793
794
795
796
797
798
799
800
801
802
803
804
805
806
807
808
809
810
811
812
813
814
815
816
817
818
819
820
821
822
823
824
825
826
827
828
829
830
831
832
833
834
835
836
837
838
839
840
841
842
843
844
845
846
847
848
849
850
851
852
853
854
855
856
857
858
859
860
861
862
863
864
865
866
867
868
869
870
871
872
873
874
875
876
877
878
879
880
881
882
883
884
885
886
887
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898
899
900
901
902
903
904
905
906
907
908
909
910
911
912
913
914
915
916
917
918
919
920
921
922
923
924
925
926
927
928
929
930
931
932
933
934
935
936
937
938
939
940
941
942
943
944
945
946
947
948
949
950
951
952
953
954
955
956
957
958
959
960
961
962
963
964
965
966
967
968
969
970
971
972
973
974
975
976
977
978
979
980
981
982
983
984
985
986
987
988
989
990
991
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
1003
1004
1005
1006
1007
1008
1009
1010
1011
1012
1013
1014
1015
1016
1017
1018
1019
1020
1021
1022
1023
1024
1025
1026
1027
1028
1029
1030
1031
1032
1033
1034
1035
1036
1037
1038
1039
1040
1041
1042
1043
1044
1045
1046
1047
1048
1049
1050
1051
1052
1053
1054
1055
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061
1062
1063
1064
1065
1066
1067
1068
1069
1070
1071
1072
1073
1074
1075
1076
1077
1078
1079
1080
1081
1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
1087
1088
1089
1090
1091
1092
1093
1094
1095
1096
1097
1098
1099
1100
1101
1102
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107
1108
1109
1110
1111
1112
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118
1119
1120
1121
1122
1123
1124
1125
1126
1127
1128
1129
1130
1131
1132
1133
1134
1135
1136
1137
1138
1139
1140
1141
1142
1143
1144
1145
1146
1147
1148
1149
1150
1151
1152
1153
1154
1155
1156
1157
1158
1159
1160
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
1166
1167
1168
1169
1170
1171
1172
1173
1174
1175
1176
1177
1178
1179
1180
1181
1182
1183
1184
1185
1186
1187
1188
1189
1190
1191
1192
1193
1194
1195
1196
1197
1198
1199
1200
1201
1202
1203
1204
1205
1206
1207
1208
1209
1210
1211
1212
1213
1214
1215
1216
1217
1218
1219
1220
1221
1222
1223
1224
1225
1226
1227
1228
1229
1230
1231
1232
1233
1234
1235
1236
1237
1238
1239
1240
1241
1242
1243
1244
1245
1246
1247
1248
1249
1250
1251
1252
1253
1254
1255
1256
1257
1258
1259
1260
1261
1262
1263
1264
1265
1266
1267
1268
1269
1270
1271
1272
1273
1274
1275
1276
1277
1278
1279
1280
1281
1282
1283
1284
1285
1286
1287
1288
1289
1290
1291
1292
1293
1294
1295
1296
1297
1298
1299
1300
1301
1302
1303
1304
1305
1306
1307
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
1314
1315
1316
1317
1318
1319
1320
1321
1322
1323
1324
1325
1326
1327
1328
1329
1330
1331
1332
1333
1334
1335
1336
1337
1338
1339
1340
1341
1342
1343
1344
1345
1346
1347
1348
1349
1350
1351
1352
1353
1354
1355
1356
1357
1358
1359
1360
1361
1362
1363
1364
1365
1366
1367
1368
1369
1370
1371
1372
1373
1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1379
1380
1381
1382
1383
1384
1385
1386
1387
1388
1389
1390
1391
1392
1393
1394
1395
1396
1397
1398
1399
1400
1401
1402
1403
1404
1405
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
1411
1412
1413
1414
1415
1416
1417
1418
1419
1420
1421
1422
1423
1424
1425
1426
1427
1428
1429
1430
1431
1432
1433
1434
1435
1436
1437
1438
1439
1440
1441
1442
1443
1444
1445
1446
1447
1448
1449
1450
1451
1452
1453
1454
1455
1456
1457
1458
1459
1460
1461
1462
1463
1464
1465
1466
1467
1468
1469
1470
1471
1472
1473
1474
1475
1476
1477
1478
1479
1480
1481
1482
1483
1484
1485
1486
1487
1488
1489
1490
1491
1492
1493
1494
1495
1496
1497
1498
1499
1500
1501
1502
1503
1504
1505
1506
1507
1508
1509
1510
1511
1512
1513
1514
1515
1516
1517
1518
1519
1520
1521
1522
1523
1524
1525
1526
1527
1528
1529
1530
1531
1532
1533
1534
1535
1536
1537
1538
1539
1540
1541
1542
1543
1544
1545
1546
1547
1548
1549
1550
1551
1552
1553
1554
1555
1556
1557
1558
1559
1560
1561
1562
1563
1564
1565
1566
1567
1568
1569
1570
1571
1572
1573
1574
1575
1576
1577
1578
1579
1580
1581
1582
1583
1584
1585
1586
1587
1588
1589
1590
1591
1592
1593
1594
1595
1596
1597
1598
1599
1600
1601
1602
1603
1604
1605
1606
1607
1608
1609
1610
1611
1612
1613
1614
1615
1616
1617
1618
1619
1620
1621
1622
1623
1624
1625
1626
1627
1628
1629
1630
1631
1632
1633
1634
1635
1636
1637
1638
1639
1640
1641
1642
1643
1644
1645
1646
1647
1648
1649
1650
1651
1652
1653
1654
1655
1656
1657
1658
1659
1660
1661
1662
1663
1664
1665
1666
1667
1668
1669
1670
1671
1672
1673
1674
1675
1676
1677
1678
1679
1680
1681
1682
1683
1684
1685
1686
1687
1688
1689
1690
1691
1692
1693
1694
1695
1696
1697
1698
1699
1700
1701
1702
1703
1704
1705
1706
1707
1708
1709
1710
1711
1712
1713
1714
1715
1716
1717
1718
1719
1720
1721
1722
1723
1724
1725
1726
1727
1728
1729
1730
1731
1732
1733
1734
1735
1736
1737
1738
1739
1740
1741
1742
1743
1744
1745
1746
1747
1748
1749
1750
1751
1752
1753
1754
1755
1756
1757
1758
1759
1760
1761
1762
1763
1764
1765
1766
1767
1768
1769
1770
1771
1772
1773
1774
1775
1776
1777
1778
1779
1780
1781
1782
1783
1784
1785
1786
1787
1788
1789
1790
1791
1792
1793
1794
1795
1796
1797
1798
1799
1800
1801
1802
1803
1804
1805
1806
1807
1808
1809
1810
1811
1812
1813
1814
1815
1816
1817
1818
1819
1820
1821
1822
1823
1824
1825
1826
1827
1828
1829
1830
1831
1832
1833
1834
1835
1836
1837
1838
1839
1840
1841
1842
1843
1844
1845
1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1865
1866
1867
1868
1869
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1887
1888
1889
1890
1891
1892
1893
1894
1895
1896
1897
1898
1899
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
2026
2027
2028
2029
2030
2031
2032
2033
2034
2035
2036
2037
2038
2039
2040
2041
2042
2043
2044
2045
2046
2047
2048
2049
2050
2051
2052
2053
2054
2055
2056
2057
2058
2059
2060
2061
2062
2063
2064
2065
2066
2067
2068
2069
2070
2071
2072
2073
2074
2075
2076
2077
2078
2079
2080
2081
2082
2083
2084
2085
2086
2087
2088
2089
2090
2091
2092
2093
2094
2095
2096
2097
2098
2099
2100
2101
2102
2103
2104
2105
2106
2107
2108
2109
2110
2111
2112
2113
2114
2115
2116
2117
2118
2119
2120
2121
2122
2123
2124
2125
2126
2127
2128
2129
2130
2131
2132
2133
2134
2135
2136
2137
2138
2139
2140
2141
2142
2143
2144
2145
2146
2147
2148
2149
2150
2151
2152
2153
2154
2155
2156
2157
2158
2159
2160
2161
2162
2163
2164
2165
2166
2167
2168
2169
2170
2171
2172
2173
2174
2175
2176
2177
2178
2179
2180
2181
2182
2183
2184
2185
2186
2187
2188
2189
2190
2191
2192
2193
2194
2195
2196
2197
2198
2199
2200
2201
2202
2203
2204
2205
2206
2207
2208
2209
2210
2211
2212
2213
2214
2215
2216
2217
2218
2219
2220
2221
2222
2223
2224
2225
2226
2227
2228
2229
2230
2231
2232
2233
2234
2235
2236
2237
2238
2239
2240
2241
2242
2243
2244
2245
2246
2247
2248
2249
2250
2251
2252
2253
2254
2255
2256
2257
2258
2259
2260
2261
2262
2263
2264
2265
2266
2267
2268
2269
2270
2271
2272
2273
2274
2275
2276
2277
2278
2279
2280
2281
2282
2283
2284
2285
2286
2287
2288
2289
2290
2291
2292
2293
2294
2295
2296
2297
2298
2299
2300
2301
2302
2303
2304
2305
2306
2307
2308
2309
2310
2311
2312
2313
2314
2315
2316
2317
2318
2319
2320
2321
2322
2323
2324
2325
2326
2327
2328
2329
2330
2331
2332
2333
2334
2335
2336
2337
2338
2339
2340
2341
2342
2343
2344
2345
2346
2347
2348
2349
2350
2351
2352
2353
2354
2355
2356
2357
2358
2359
2360
2361
2362
2363
2364
2365
2366
2367
2368
2369
2370
2371
2372
2373
2374
2375
2376
2377
2378
2379
2380
2381
2382
2383
2384
2385
2386
2387
2388
2389
2390
2391
2392
2393
2394
2395
2396
2397
2398
2399
2400
2401
2402
2403
2404
2405
2406
2407
2408
2409
2410
2411
2412
2413
2414
2415
2416
2417
2418
2419
2420
2421
2422
2423
2424
2425
2426
2427
2428
2429
2430
2431
2432
2433
2434
2435
2436
2437
2438
2439
2440
2441
2442
2443
2444
2445
2446
2447
2448
2449
2450
2451
2452
2453
2454
2455
2456
2457
2458
2459
2460
2461
2462
2463
2464
2465
2466
2467
2468
2469
2470
2471
2472
2473
2474
2475
2476
2477
2478
2479
2480
2481
2482
2483
2484
2485
2486
2487
2488
2489
2490
2491
2492
2493
2494
2495
2496
2497
2498
2499
2500
2501
2502
2503
2504
2505
2506
2507
2508
2509
2510
2511
2512
2513
2514
2515
2516
2517
2518
2519
2520
2521
2522
2523
2524
2525
2526
2527
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77862 ***

                   THE CURSE OF THE PAINTED CLIFFS

                           By W. C. Tuttle
           Author of “Spawn of the Desert,” “The Plotters,” etc.


                             Calico Town

                  A sky of brass, the sun a flame,
                  And the land no place to dwell;
                  The only spot that God forgot,
                  A hunk of earth, so doggone hot
                  That it still belongs to Hell.

                            Descriptive of Calico Town.


An ore-wagon creaking over a desert road, going at a snail-like pace,
heading for a jumble of bright-hued, rock-ribbed hills. The land a
desolation of sand, harsh sage, cactus, which rattled like paper in the
heat-laden breeze. The sky a brassy dome, almost green in its
intensity, out of which flamed a sun.

Far above the hills circled the buzzards, seemingly suspended on
invisible wires, for they hung motionless in that thin air--watching,
always watching. On all sides stretched the desert, broken here and
there in the distance by black peaks, as though at some remote period
this country had been a vast mountain range, which had sifted full of
sand, until only the peaks remained.

Only the creaking ore-wagon and the rutted road showed the hand of man
in this place. A few hours would suffice the desert to reclaim the
road; for the desert is jealous of the hand of man, and, like the
jungle, it is ever striving to protect its own.

But the ore-wagon creaked on and on toward the painted rocks, which
flashed back the sunlight. The two men on the ore-wagon humped
dejectedly in the heat, saying nothing. They were black from the wind
and sun, colorless of garb, harsh of feature.

Up a rutty, rocky road creaked the wagon, going into the painted hills.
One of the men touched the other on the arm and pointed toward a spire
of rocks. On a shelf of this spire stood a girl, looking out into the
desert. Her black dress threw her into bold relief against the orange
tint of the rocks.

She was not beautiful, but there was a sweetness, a wistfulness about
her face that made men look at her more than once. Her eyes were a
misty-gray; almost black in the strong lights, and her brown hair, with
its tint of copper, she wore in a long braid.

“Luck Sleed,” said one of the men in a flat, colorless voice. “She’s
always lookin’ out into the desert.”

“What fer?” wondered the other.

“Gawd knows what fer.”

“Ain’t nothin’ to see, except the damn desert. What would anybody look
at the desert fer?”

“Whatcha ask me fer?” peevishly. “I ain’t never seen nothin’ out there
to look at. Been here a year and I ain’t never seen nothin’ but heat
and sand. Gawd, I wonder what green grass and runnin’ water look like.”

“Ain’t none,” wearily. “Fairy tales, Jim; things yuh dream you’ve seen,
like castles in Spain. Wonder what Luck Sleed is lookin’ at. Dreams,
mebbe?”

“Mebbe. Agin mebbe she’s lookin’ fer a sweetheart to come in out of the
desert.” The man laughed bitterly and shook his head. “He’d be a hell
of a looker, if he crossed the Mojave.”

“Like me and you, eh? But looks don’t count up here, Jim. Nothin’ much
counts, except water and whiskey and bein’ quick with a gun. If yuh got
all them along with a heat-proof brain, mebbe you’ll git along. I
dunno.”

“Gotta have a sun-proof brain, that’s a cinch. Mine’s fried to a
cinder. Cinder brain, that’s me. That’s what we all got. If we didn’t
have cinder brains we’d all pull out of here, but a cinder brain won’t
let yuh think long enough to git plumb out of the Mojave. Giddap!”

The ore-wagon ground on up to a rock-ribbed flat, the tired horses
panting heavily in the heat, leaving behind them the tall spire of
rock, beside which stood the black-clad girl, looking out into the
desert.

Before them, on the slope, seemingly plastered against the cliffs, was
the town of Calico--a one-street huddle of adobe houses, made from
adobe clay and colored with muck from the silver mines. No two of the
houses were the same color, and at a distance they appeared as colored
drawings against the cliffs.

The street was short--not over two hundred yards in length--paved
unevenly with the solid rock of the hills. Back of the street the hill
sloped sharply to ledges, where a few more adobe houses perched
drunkenly, and behind them towered the painted cliffs, which were
honeycombed with tunnels.

On the north side of the town was a deep, rock-bound canyon, known as
Sunshine Alley. It angled sharply back into the mountain, the sides
breaking sheer, and the whole canyon so grotesque in formation that it
did not appear to be a work of nature. And on all sides, beyond the
slope on which stood the main street, the cliffs heightened in broken
ledges, dotted thickly with more tunnels, with wooden chutes extending
into the canyon, through which poured streams of silver-laden ore, to
ore-wagons or cribs built in the bottom.

And in this Sunshine Alley lived the greater part of the thirty-five
hundred population; lived in caves, hollowed places in the cliffs and
in homes built into the angle of the canyon. For the most part they
were roofless, windowless. Rain did not come to the Calico mountains;
so there was little need of a dwelling place, except for semi-privacy.
With great frequency one or more of the population would move
permanently to Hell’s Depot, the iron-hard graveyard which played a
conspicuous part in the life of the town.

In fact, Calico, in the middle of the eighties, was little better than
a village of cliff dwellers, as far as habitation was concerned; and
morals were as scarce as house-tops.

“Silver” Sleed had been the boss of Calico for a number of years. His
Silver Bar was the only saloon and gambling house in the town, a
concession which he had jealously guarded, and his death had caused all
of his holdings to be inherited by Luck. Her name was Nola, but Sleed,
whose good fortune was proverbial, had nicknamed her Sleed’s Luck. To
her belonged the Silver Bar, the California saloon and gambling house
at Cactus City, and the Lady Slipper and Nola mines, which were two of
the largest producers of Calico.

“I don’t sabe Luck,” declared one of the mine owners, following the
death of Silver Sleed. “Luck hankers f’r education and wants t’ be a
grand lady; so why in hell don’t she sell out and go where she can be
them three things? She’s plumb rich now.”

“Don’t have t’ sell out,” declared another. “She can go away and let
somebody run them places, can’t she?”

Luck let others run her business places, but still she stayed on.
Something seemed to hold her to Calico, although she hated it with all
of her young soul. Men had tried to make love to her, but Luck would
have none of them.

Just now she came back from the tall spire, where she had stood looking
out across the desolation of the Mojave desert. The long, purple
shadows of evening were already softening the rough edges of the hills,
and from the depths of Sunshine Alley long, thin ribbons of smoke were
already reaching upward, as the evening meals were being prepared for
the men, who would soon be coming out of the tunnels, ant-like figures,
which would wind slowly down the perilous trails or swing carefully
down rope ladders.

Then would come the moonlight to make the world a fairyland of the
softest of blue; a mystical land, covered by a velvet sky, studded with
sky-diamonds, which seemed very close to the earth, and a moon, like a
great ball, stereopticon in its contour and fairly transparent in its
soft brilliancy.

Luck loved the nights. From the doorway of her home, perched on a
narrow slope above the town, she always sat in the moonlight; a
solitary figure, drinking in the wonders, while below her gleamed the
yellow lights of the town and to her ears came the screeching of a
violin, the tin-panny jangle of a piano, the discordant jumble of human
voices, or, perhaps, the dull thump of a pistol shot.

Luck came slowly up the street, paying little attention to those who
spoke to her, until she came opposite the Silver Bar. A tall,
frock-coated man was standing in the doorway, evidently deep in
thought. His dark eyes were squinted beneath the brim of his wide,
black hat and his white teeth were clenched tightly around a very black
cigar.

A thin nose surmounted a sharply waxed mustache, below which jutted a
belligerent chin. But the most noticeable thing about this man was his
lavish display of jewels. The buttons of his ornate vest, the
stick-pin, cufflinks were all made from finely cut sapphires of large
size, but the solitaire which gleamed from the third finger of his left
hand dwarfed and outshone all the rest.

This man was “Fire” French, a virtuoso of the green cloth. He had been
nicknamed “Sapphire,” which had been shortened to Fire.

Contrary to his nickname, he was as cold as ice--a killer; a killer who
weighed the odds carefully and spared when the balance was against him.
He lifted his eyes and looked across at Luck. His hand swept to his
sombrero and he bowed. Luck merely nodded and passed on. Fire French
watched her pass on and a smile twisted the corners of his thin mouth.
He shook his head, as though he did not understand her. For the first
time in his life, Fire French had found a woman who was not at all
dazzled by his personality or raiment, and he was piqued.

At the instigation of several friends, she had engaged French to run
the Silver Bar. They had argued that it would require a man of great
ability, and Fire French was the man. There were only two dissenting
voices--those of Mica Cates and Louie Yen.

Mica Cates had stood squarely behind Luck in everything, except hiring
Fire French. Mica was a born pessimist, a retailer of news, to which
was added dire prophecy, and freely-given advice. He was short of
stature, bowed of legs and bearded to the eyes.

Louie Yen was the only Chinaman in Calico; the only oriental that had
ever been allowed in the town. He owned the only laundry and minded his
own business. He was very old--he did not know how old--with a wrinkled
face, the skin of which was parchment-like and seemed to crackle--when
he grinned his toothless grin. And Louie Yen was very wise. He had the
inherited wisdom of his ancestors, to which he had added his own golden
years of experience.

Mica Cates did not like Fire French, and he did not care who knew it.
Louie Yen did not like Fire French, but he told it to no man, except
himself; because he knew only one man he could trust--himself.

Louie Yen worshiped Luck Sleed. He had watched her bloom into womanhood,
and he was forever shaking his head sadly over his ironing-board or
washtub. To him she would always be “Li’l gi’l,” just as she was the day
that she came to town with Silver Sleed.

Louie was standing in the doorway of his laundry, smoking a long pipe,
as Luck came up the street. He could see Fire French looking after her.
He had seen Fire French’s courtly bow. Now he removed the pipe from his
mouth and grinned pleasantly.

“H’lo, li’l gi’l.”

“Hello, Louie,” Luck stopped, and smiled at him.

“Louie Yen jus’ smile,” he told her seriously. “Too ol’. No can bow,
yo’ sabe?”

“Oh!” Luck looked back toward the Silver Bar, but Fire French was not
there now.

“Wha’sa matta?” queried Louie. “Yo’ no look please.”

“I want to ask you a question, Louie Yen. Do you remember the day
before, or the day that my father was killed?”

Louie nodded quickly.

“There was a poker game, Louie Yen.”

Louie nodded again, but his eyes were blank now. He was trying to
forget.

“In that poker game,” continued Luck, “my father lost some money to the
man who was called Duke Steele. That money was never paid, Louie Yen.
Do you know how much money it was?”

Louie Yen knew, but Louie Yen did not want to tell her that Duke Steele
had won forty-six thousand dollars from Silver Sleed, and that he had
accepted Sleed’s I. O. U., for this great amount. Duke Steele had
disappeared, following the death of Sleed, and no one knew where he had
gone.

“How much money, Louie Yen?” persisted Luck.

“No can tell, li’l gi’l. Five men see fo’ sure; fo’ dead, one gone.”

“Why didn’t he come back and collect his money?”

“Ho!” chuckled Louie Yen. “No can tell. Yo’ want find him jus’ fo’ give
him money, li’l gi’l?”

Luck flushed slightly and Louie Yen puffed rapidly on his long pipe. He
was very wise, was Louie Yen. Luck turned and started up the hill.

“Goo’-by, li’l gi’l,” called Louie softly.

“Good night, Louie Yen.”

The misty moonlight had quickly followed the sunset, and the mountain
was bathed in a soft blue haze, making everything indistinct. Men were
already coming in over the rim of Sunshine Alley, and the yellow lights
of the street threw their shadows in grotesque shapes on the adobe
walls.

From the doorway of her home, Luck Sleed looked down at the lighted
street and lifted her eyes to the velvety, starlit sky.

“God only made the nights,” she said softly. “Preacher Bill Bushnell
told me that. He said that the devil bossed the day-shift until Calico
was built and then he worked overtime.”

Luck Sleed’s life had not been laid in pleasant paths; being, as far
back as she could remember, one succession of killings. It was little
wonder that she looked down upon the reveling Calico and repeated
Preacher Bill’s decision that----

“Calico don’t need religion, Luck. You could preach the gospel down
there until hell froze over. They don’t sabe what yuh say. Tell it to
’em in hot lead--that’s the language they understand. I ain’t sayin’ a
word agin’ your father, but Calico needs a man with high ideals and the
ability to shoot hell out of those who are too deaf to hear him curse
’em.”

Luck smiled over the words of Preacher Bill, who had not lived long
afterward. Perhaps he was right, perhaps wrong; she did not know. At
any rate, she was tired of bloodshed and the shamelessness of Calico
Town. She gazed over the town, out into the misty stillness of the
desert. Somewhere out there was a man; a young man, whose face was
indelibly stamped upon her memory. He and his little burro had faded
out into the desert, carrying an I. O. U. for forty-six thousand
dollars, signed by Silver Sleed.

Luck did not know the amount of this I. O. U., but she did know that it
was an enormous amount. Did Duke Steele deliberately throw away this
amount so that she might have it, or was he crazy, as some declared?
Luck shook her head. She was considered wealthy, but this money would
never belong to her until that gambling debt was paid. That was why she
stayed in Calico--to pay a debt. So she told herself.

                   *       *       *       *       *

It was the following morning that Mica Cates came past Luck’s house,
bringing her word of a shooting scrape in the Silver Bar, in which a
miner had been killed by Fire French.

“He was a miner in the Lady Slipper, Luck,” explained Mica, “and he had
a wife and one kid.”

Luck shut her lips tightly.

“I reckon the boys’ll have t’ take up a collection f’r her and the
kid,” observed Mica sadly.

“What started the trouble, Mica?”

“Poker game. This Andy Bowers didn’t take kindly to the way Fire French
dealt the draw in a big pot; so he throws down his hand and opines to
remove his money, statin’ at the same time that he don’t care t’ play
the game thataway.

“French kinda watches him, like a cat watchin’ a mouse, and then he
says, ‘You insinuatin’ that this here game ain’t on the square?’

“Andy hauls his money out and gets to his feet, as he says, ‘Nobody
ever seen me draw my money out of a pot before, French; so yuh can
figure it out for yourself.’

“French gits to his feet, kinda easy-like; not actin’ a bit sore, but
before anybody has a chance to say a word, he shoots from his hip and
kills Andy too dead t’ skin. Then Fire French explains that he don’t
allow no man t’ question his honesty nor honor. I ain’t sayin’ that the
game was crooked, Luck; but it don’t ’pear to me that it was sufficient
cause t’ kill a man.”

Luck shook her head. “A gambler’s honor! Most of the killings are over
honor, Mica Cates. Does taking a life clear a gambler’s honor, I
wonder?”

“I s’pose. If a man ever declares ’em crooked, they’re done for, ’less
they wipe out the insult with blood.”

“It’s a queer world, Mica Cates.”

“Yes’m, Luck, it sure is queer. What do yuh know about the new saloon
and gamblin’ house, the Mojave?”

“Nothing. I only know that the new place is going to open tonight.”

“Silver Sleed wouldn’t ’a’ stood fer it,” declared Mica. “No tin-horn
gamblers ever cut in on his town. It sure looks t’ me like they was
a-goin’ t’ try and run you out of business, Luck. Them two new places in
Cactus City has plumb ruined yore trade down there, and now this here
new place will split up business. Killin’ of Andy Bowers ain’t goin’ t’
make Fire French any too pop’lar, y’betcha.”

Luck nodded slowly. It was true that the Sleed fortune was not growing.
Both the Lady Slipper and the Nola were not paying expenses now. Luck
had twenty thousand dollars in coin hidden away, which had been slowly
dribbling away through alleged bad runs of luck in the gambling houses.

“Pete Black still runnin’ the Lady Slipper?” queried Mica Cates.

“Yes--both mines, Mica.”

“Neither one payin’ a cent? I heard it talked about, Luck. Poor old Andy
Bowers talked about it last night. He had a few drinks, I reckon. Some
of the miners was worryin’ about them two veins peterin’ out and they
was talkin’ about it. Andy said it wasn’t poor ore, but it was damn poor
minin’. Said they cut right away from the rich ore in the Lady Slipper.
Well, Andy’s gone now. Feller ain’t none too secure in this here life.
Here t’day, gone t’morrow--and a gambler’s honor saved. S’long, Luck.”

“So-long, Mica Cates.”

She watched him go over the rim into Sunshine Alley; going down to start
a collection for the wife and kid of Andy Bowers. Luck turned and went
back into the house, where she stopped before a crude mirror and looked
at herself closely. A misty-eyed girl stared back at her; a girl with
tousled hair and compressed lips.

For a long time she stared into the mirror at herself. Lying on the
old-fashioned bureau in front of her was the six-shooter that had
belonged to Silver Sleed; the gun he had taught her to shoot.

Suddenly another reflection seemed to fade into the mirror, and she saw
Fire French’s grinning lips, waxed mustache, sparkling sapphires.

Swiftly she whirled, with the gun in her hand; but he had stopped midway
between the open door and where she stood, and was still smiling at her.

“What do you want?” she asked coldly.

Fire French laughed softly and shook his head. “Did I frighten you,
Luck?”

“No!” She shook her head quickly. “But why do you come sneaking into my
house, Fire French?”

“I didn’t mean to. The door was open and I seen you admirin’ yourself in
the mirror; so I thought I’d help you do a little admirin’, Luck.”

“This house is mine and I don’t allow nobody to come here. I wasn’t
admiring myself.”

“You ought to,” smiled French. “You’re pretty. Never seen eyes like
you’ve got, Luck. Some folks look at you and think you’re still a kid,
but you’re a woman and you’ve got a woman’s charms. Why don’t yuh mix
with folks?”

“Like you?” queried Luck.

“Well, why not? Is there anythin’ wrong with me?”

“Yes,” said Luck slowly. “You’re too honest.”

Fire French laughed loudly, thinking that she meant it as a compliment.

“You have too much honor to protect,” added Luck.

“What do you mean?” French came closer to her, but he still respected
the unwavering revolver muzzle.

“Killing a man to protect your honor,” said Luck slowly, “a man with a
wife and a kid.”

“Oh, hell!” French shrugged his shoulders impatiently, “Do you want it
said that a crooked deal is pulled off in the Silver Bar?”

“No, nor a killing.”

French smiled sarcastically. “Silver Sleed wasn’t so particular. You
hired me to run that place, and I’m going to run it, Luck--run it like
Silver Sleed did.” French glanced around the room and shook his head.
“It ain’t right for you to live alone like this. You’re too pretty to
spend your time alone.”

“I hired you to run the Silver Bar, but not to run my business,” said
Luck coldly. “Get out of here!”

“Why?” queried French, “what’s the idea? You wouldn’t shoot me for just
coming in your house, would you?”

“You shot a man to protect your honor,” Luck reminded him in a flat
voice, “and I’m as good as any gambler, I hope.”

“You’re hopeless, Luck.” French shrugged his shoulders and turned to the
door.

“Maybe I am, but not helpless,” retorted Luck. Fire French laughed
shortly and went down the trail, while Luck still leaned against the
bureau and stared at the doorway, with the heavy gun hanging limp in her
hand.

Came a soft knocking at the door and she turned to see Louie Yen,
carrying a small bundle of laundry, which he placed on a chair. The
bundle had been carelessly tied--not at all like Louie Yen’s neat
work--and Louie Yen was not panting from the walk up the steep hill.

“I bling jus’ li’l bit today,” apologized Louie. “Mo’ bling tomolla,
li’l gi’l.”

“Why did you only bring part of it, Louie Yen?”

Louie shifted his feet and stared blankly at her.

“Velly hot today,” he observed. “Mus’ go back now.”

He turned and went out of the door, hurrying away before Luck had a
chance to question him further. But Luck knew that Louie Yen had seen
Fire French coming up to her house, and she knew that Louie Yen had
grabbed part of her laundry and followed Fire French. The few pieces of
laundry were only an alibi for Louie Yen to be there in case she needed
help.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Cartier Le Moyne was the biggest man in the desert country; the biggest
physically, and no weakling mentally. But he did not let the power of
his physical being interfere with his dreams of conquest; his plans to
make himself the king of the desert.

His plan was to control the mines, the liquor trade and the gambling.
The rest of the desert was merely incidental. Le Moyne’s keen mind
studied the possibilities for a long time before he began active
operations. One of his stumbling blocks had been Silver Sleed, but he
was safely out of the way now.

Le Moyne had come to Cactus City as an assayer. To his little shop had
come the prospector, trusting in Le Moyne to give him a fair report on
assays; but Le Moyne was not in business for any such purpose. If he
found a particularly rich sample of ore, and was unable to find out
where it was found from the prospector himself, he would have a trusted
man to trail the prospector back to his claim.

A rifle shot, another man who did not come back, a location notice filed
in the name of the man who fired the shot--it was all so simple. No law
to interfere. In a few days the coyotes and buzzards would remove the
evidence, and what was left the desert would cover deeply. Then Le Moyne
would acquire the prospect legally, and proceed to develop it.

But these prospects required money to develop them, and Le Moyne was
shooting at bigger game just now. He still operated the assay office,
while from his private office he pulled the strings that were to
eventually drag the desert kingdom into his big hands.

Two days before he had sent one of his trusted men to follow a
prospector, whose assay sample had run into hundreds of dollars a ton.
He sat at his desk, humped in his chair, wondering how large this rich
vein might be. His features were massive, seemingly out of proportion to
the rest of the man. His skin was greasy, yellow; his hair black and of
coarse texture.

His desk was a litter of papers, ore samples, a box of very black
cigars. Directly in front of him lay a heavy six-shooter. Le Moyne was
not a gunman, but he kept a loaded gun handy. He preferred to let his
hirelings do the shooting.

Suddenly his door flew open and a man stepped inside. Le Moyne’s head
jerked up quickly at the intrusion, but he did not speak. The intruder
was kicking the door shut with his heel, but keeping his dark gray eyes
steadily on Le Moyne. He was hardly past thirty years of age, bronzed as
an Indian, with black hair, which grew low between his ear and cheek,
and with the easy grace of a desert wolf.

Neither of them spoke. Le Moyne scowled slightly, but there was no hint
of recognition in his black eyes. The newcomer’s left hand searched
inside his belt and with a flip of the wrist tossed a small buckskin
sack onto the desk in front of Le Moyne, where it thudded softly.

Le Moyne glanced at the sack and back at the man, taking in his personal
appearance. This man wore a faded shirt, wide sombrero, woolen pants,
which were tucked into the tops of his boots. His waist was circled by a
wide, weather-beaten cartridge belt, heavily studded with cartridges,
and the holster, which hung low on his thigh, contained a
serviceable-looking six-shooter. Le Moyne also noted that the holster
was tied down to the man’s leg.

Le Moyne’s eyes flashed down to the buckskin sack and he shifted in his
chair.

“Whatcha want it assayed for?” he asked hoarsely.

“The price of a man’s life,” said the younger man coldly. “Melt her up
and see if it’s worth it, Le Moyne.”

“What do yuh mean, stranger?” wonderingly.

“I’m Duke Steele,” said the man softly. “Your hired killer told me a few
things and sent that hundred dollars back to you. He said you always
paid him in advance.”

Le Moyne licked his lips. He had known who this man was, but had tried
to bluff. Now, he knew the bluff was not going to work well at all.

“A quitter, was he?” Le Moyne knew he might as well admit his guilt in
the matter.

“Not the way you mean, Le Moyne. When your assay only showed a trace of
gold, I knew you lied for a purpose; so I watched my own trail. I had
melted some gold and run it into the seams of that sample.”

Le Moyne blinked rapidly. He had been a fool. Why did he not give this
man an honest report? The fact of the matter was this: Le Moyne had been
too lazy to assay the sample, but knew from outward appearances that it
was worth acquiring.

“Well, you can’t prove anything,” declared Le Moyne.

Duke Steele smiled and walked over to the desk, where he picked up Le
Moyne’s gun and tossed it aside. Then he sat down on the corner of the
desk and smiled down at Le Moyne’s greasy face.

“Goin’ to boss the desert, are yuh, Le Moyne? Yes, your man told me all
about it before he cashed in. I reckon he told me a lot of things about
you. Seems queer to you that this man should tell me things, but when a
man’s dyin’ he has to talk to somebody. Kinda eases his conscience, I
reckon. That man had quite a lot of sin on his mind.

“He told me about killin’ off the original locator of the Dancing Jasper
mine. He told me how you sent him on the trail of the old crippled Swede
that located the Aztec, and how the old Swede squealed when the bullet
hit him, and then he told me----”

“Damn your soul, stop that!” Le Moyne’s face had gone ashen. “You can’t
prove nothin’! What do you want, Steele?”

“Me?” Steele grinned softly. “I want my part of this big steal you’re
going to make, Le Moyne.”

“Oh!” Le Moyne relaxed in his chair and wiped the perspiration off his
face. He laughed, but it was without mirth.

“No, I’m not a fool,” assured Duke Steele. “I know what kind of an
organization you’ve got. Mebbe they could wipe me off the earth without
no trouble. I want to throw in with you, Le Moyne. I sabe that nobody
outside of your gang will be able to hold a thing here, and I want
mine.”

Le Moyne laughed, and this time with mirth. “I thought you was an honest
man, Steele. Ha, ha, ha! You don’t need to be afraid of me and my gang,
’cause you’re one of us. I need a few more men like you--men with cold
nerve.”

“I’m not afraid of you and your gang, Le Moyne. Who have yuh got that
stacks up as a nervy man?”

Le Moyne smiled and lighted a cigar. “Well, I’ve got Fire French and
Pete Black at Calico--been there for quite a while. ‘Slim’ Curlew is
there by this time. He’s goin’ to run the Mojave. With Pete Black in
charge of the Nola and Lady Slipper, Fire French in charge of the Silver
Bar at Calico, and Tex Supelveda runnin’ the California, here in Cactus
City, I reckon we kinda stand to put these two towns where we want ’em.”

Duke Steele smiled. “And you’ve got men on every good prospect around
here. Where do I fit in? Got any place to put me at Calico?”

Le Moyne licked the wrapper of his cigar thoughtfully before he said,
“Why do yuh want to go to Calico, Steele?”

“It was my pardner who killed Silver Sleed, and they ran me out of
town.”

Le Moyne straightened in his chair. “Thasso? Say, are you the feller
that trimmed Sleed in a poker game?”

Duke nodded. Le Moyne leaned across his desk.

“I heard all about that, Steele. How much did yuh win from him that
night?”

“Forty-six thousand.”

“Whew!” Le Moyne whistled softly. “Where is the I. O. U. he gave yuh?”

“Lost it,” lied Duke softly, and his thoughts went back to that night,
when he stopped in the desert moonlight and tore into bits that piece of
paper. He wanted Luck to have all that money.

“Gawd!” mumbled Le Moyne. “Yuh could collect that money if yuh still had
the paper. Didja ever see Sleed’s girl?”

Duke Steele’s eyes softened for a moment, but he did not want Le Moyne
to know too much; so he shook his head.

“She owns everythin’ that Sleed owned,” grinned Le Moyne, “but the mines
have quit payin’ and the Silver Bar is havin’ a hard run of luck. Mebbe
we can buy cheap in a short time. The California ain’t doin’ nothin’
either.”

“Freeze-out, eh?” queried Duke.

“Damn right!” Le Moyne leaned across the table and held out his enormous
right hand clenched. “Inside of six months I’ll have the Mojave desert
where I can squeeze every dollar out through my fingers, Steele. I’m
goin’ to be good to them that help me--to hell with the rest!”

“Where do I go?” queried Duke.

“To Calico. This time they won’t run yuh out, Steele. Fire French can
use yuh, I reckon--him and Slim Curlew.”

He tossed the buckskin sack to Duke.

“Go and get some clothes, Steele. If that ain’t enough, send ’em to me
for the balance.”

Duke Steele accepted the money and left Le Moyne, who was very glad to
realize that things had turned out much better for him than he had
expected. It was true that he had lost a hired killer, failed to acquire
a rich mine, but a man like Duke Steele was worth winning.

But Le Moyne had no idea of playing fair with Duke. He was only a
tool--and Le Moyne needed good tools just now. Later on, when his
usefulness was over, Le Moyne knew of many ways to rid himself of those
who expected to help him in squeezing the desert.

And Duke Steele knew all this; knew that he would only be a cog in Le
Moyne’s machinery--a machine that would be broken into bits after Le
Moyne’s position was secured. Others might pride themselves that they
would have rich holdings under Le Moyne, but Duke Steele knew that Le
Moyne intended to be absolute monarch.

But Duke lost no time in buying new clothes, and when he left the little
trading store he was a sartorial triumph. A wide, white sombrero,
trimmed in a band of Mexican silver; a many-hued silk shirt, a beaded
vest, frock coat and a pair of checked trousers, narrow of knee and
broad of bottom, which he tucked into a pair of fancy-stitched,
soft-leather boots, with very high heels. He spent the hundred dollars
and left a bill of another hundred against Cartier Le Moyne. As a
parting present the storekeeper gave him a large scarlet silk
handkerchief, which Duke Steele looped about his neck.

The stage was preparing for the sixty-mile night trip to Calico, and
Cartier Le Moyne was talking with the driver when Duke came up to them.
Le Moyne grinned at Duke, but did not mention the gaudy outfit.

“Ready to leave?” he asked, and Duke nodded.

“Hop on,” grunted the driver. “We’re pullin’ out.”

“The driver will take yuh to French,” said Le Moyne, and went on up the
street. Duke watched after him until he went into the California saloon,
and then climbed into the stage-coach.

Sixty miles over a desert road was a long way--an almost impossible
distance in daylight--so the stage left either terminal at sundown and
made the entire distance in the cool of the nights. The natural desert
road, untouched by scraper or grader, is as smooth as the best
boulevard, and the stage-coach swayed gently to the rhythm of four
speeding horses.

Alone inside the coach, Duke Steele relaxed. He was wearing Le Moyne’s
clothes, taking Le Moyne’s pay and was now one of an organization that
would not hesitate for a moment to kill him if he played them false.
Still he smiled softly and thought of a misty-eyed girl. No, Duke Steele
was not in love with the girl he had barely known almost a year before.
She was only a kid, he remembered, but she had probably saved him from
death at the hands of a mob.

It seemed but yesterday to Duke Steele. He had led his burro silently
away from Calico, and out on the desert he had destroyed Silver Sleed’s
I. O. U. for forty-six thousand dollars. That was a lot of money--more
money than Silver Sleed could have paid. It would have taken everything
away from Luck.

Duke had expected that Luck would have sold out and gone away long
before this. She wanted education; wanted to live in a civilized world.
Why did she stay in Calico? Duke shook his head over the question and
went to sleep, with his head pillowed in his white sombrero and the
scarlet handkerchief across his face to keep out the sifting sand.

                   *       *       *       *       *

The stage drew up at the adobe stage-station and Duke Steele alighted.
There had been little change in Calico in a year. Louie Yen was coming
up the street and he glanced curiously at Duke. Somehow the face was
familiar, but the Chinaman was unable to remember just where he had seen
this man before. Duke went straight to the Silver Bar and found Fire
French, who had just got out of bed. In a few short words he explained
who he was and who had sent him to Calico. French looked him over
coldly, until the stage-driver came in and corroborated Duke’s story.

“I don’t know what in hell Le Moyne wanted to send yuh here for,”
growled French. “There’s enough of us here to handle this end of it.”

“Yuh might go to Cactus City and ask him,” replied Duke coldly.

“Yeah?” sarcastically. “Did he tell you to take orders from me?”

“He did not.”

“Oh, I suppose you came up here to run things, eh?”

“I’m here because I told Le Moyne I wanted to come here. There wasn’t
any argument, French.”

French flicked back his long hair with a jerk of his head and grinned
patronizingly at Duke Steele.

“Can that be possible? Pardner, knowin’ Le Moyne like I do, I don’t
hesitate to tell you that you’re a----”

Swift as the slash of a panther, Duke Steele’s right hand shot out and
an iron fist collided with French’s jutting jaw. Back against the bar
went French, rebounding into a left-handed swing that caught him on the
opposite side of the jaw, knocking him cold.

As Duke landed his knockout he sprang back across the room, and his
heavy six-shooter covered the few people who had witnessed the affair.
The two bartenders stared at Duke and seemed to want to look over the
top of the bar at the huddled figure of Fire French, but did not want to
take too many chances with this quick-moving, hard-eyed young man.

“I reckon he was goin’ to call me a liar,” observed Duke slowly, “which
I wasn’t.”

Fire French came slowly back to life and got to his feet. The world was
still semi-opaque and he clung to the bar for several moments before his
head cleared sufficiently for him to remember what had happened. His
teeth seemed to ache collectively and there was a numbness about his
jaw-bone.

He looked at Duke Steele dazedly and felt tenderly of his jaw. Fire
French had never been knocked down before and he did not like the
after-effect. It would cause him to lose caste, but there was nothing he
could do--just now.

“I didn’t let yuh finish your declaration,” said Duke seriously, “’cause
I don’t like the word you was goin’ to use, French. If you don’t think
yuh had an even break in the game, we’ll throw away our guns and settle
it now.”

Fire French took this under advisement. Here was a man who wanted to
fight, a man who was prepared--and Fire French never fought unless the
odds were in his favor.

“Or,” continued Duke, “if you’d rather settle it with a gun, I’m
willin’.”

French shook his head slowly. “I reckon I made a mistake, Steele.” His
voice was flat.

Duke grinned. “Le Moyne told me he had nervy men up here. I suppose I
ought to accept your apology, French, but it wasn’t sincere. You reckon
you made a mistake, eh? Yes, you did, but you still think I’m a liar;
the mistake you made was in saying such a thing.”

“Well, let’s drop the argument,” said French painfully. His jaw was
beginning to hurt badly, and his pride pained him even more than the
sore jaw. He knew that argument was not going to get him anywhere with
this gaudy young man.

“All right, I’m willin’ to drop it,” agreed Duke. “Never did like
arguments. I reckon I’ll go and find myself some breakfast.”

Duke went out the door, but kept one eye on French and the others.
French turned to the bar and helped himself to a stiff jolt of liquor.
The stage-driver moved in beside him and accepted a free drink.

Then the two men turned toward the door, where Luck Sleed was standing,
looking at them. Her face was a trifle pale, for she had spent a
sleepless night arriving at a grim resolution concerning Fire French. It
was the first time she had ever been in the Silver Bar, and the men
stared at her wonderingly, as her eyes traveled from face to face. Then
she looked directly at Fire French and her words were very distinct and
spaced widely apart:

“French--you--are--fired.”

She flung her hand in an imperious gesture toward the door.
“Get--out--of--here. I’m--going--to--run--this--place--myself.”

“You are?” French gasped, and glanced quickly at the others, as though
not believing his own ears.

“I am!”

For a moment they were too stunned to do more than stare at her and at
each other. Then French laughed loudly.

“Girl, have you gone crazy?” he demanded harshly.

“You can’t do that, Luck,” added Black, quickly.

“Can’t I?” Luck half-smiled, but only with her lips.

“Never heard of such a crazy idea in m’ life,” declared Slim Curlew.

Luck pointed toward the rear of the room. “Take your stuff and get out,”
she went on. “I don’t know how many people you have hired since you
started working here, but they go with you.”

French snorted sarcastically and spread his hands in a gesture of
resignation, “What can yuh do in a case like that?”

“Better think it over, Luck,” advised Black. “You can’t run a place like
this. Silver Sleed never let yuh mix into this kind of business--with
these kind of folks. You don’t know anythin’ about the business.”

“Oh, let her run it if she wants to,” laughed French. “She won’t last
long.”

He turned and went to the rear, where he packed up his few belongings.
The bartenders grinned widely and came around to the front of the bar.

“We’re fired, too, are we?” one of them asked.

“If French hired you, yes,” replied Luck firmly.

“You’ll have a sweet time runnin’ this place,” stated Slim Curlew
threateningly.

“I expect to,” smiled Luck, “and I’m going to start by asking you to
keep out of here.”

“Zasso?” spluttered Curlew. “This is a public place and you’ll have a
hell of a time if you try to pick and choose your customers.”

Curlew swaggered out and after a moment Black and the two bartenders
followed. French came from the rear room, carrying his belongings. He
grinned sarcastically at Luck, but did not speak, as he went out of the
door.

The miners had stood apart during the argument, but now they gathered
around her.

“I tended bar for yore dad,” said one of them, a youngish sort of miner,
“but French fired me and I went to work in the mines.”

“Did you?” queried Luck. “I suppose I will need bartenders, won’t I? Do
you want the job?”

“I’ll take it,” he declared, and at that moment Mica Cates came in. He
stared at Luck for a moment, and then a wide grin spread across his
face.

“Luck, I was in the Mojave a few minutes ago and I heard what you was
goin’ to do. Fired the whole works, eh?”

“Hired me already,” grinned the new bartender.

“That’s good,” applauded Mica. “Bud Harvey’s a good bartender. But,
Luck, yuh got to have at least three men to run games and one more
bartender.”

“Will you work for me, Mica Cates?”

“Gosh, no!” gasped Mica. “I dunno a danged thing about this kinda work,
but mebbe I can help yuh pick out some good men.”

“All right,” smiled Luck, “you pick them out for me. I don’t know what
to do myself.”

Mica Cates considered her for a few moments and scratched his head, as
he said, “I dunno either, Luck. If it was me, the first thing I’d do
would be to hook m’ fingers around a gun.”

Luck’s right hand came slowly into view, from where she had concealed it
in the folds of her skirt, and it was holding a heavy six-shooter.

                   *       *       *       *       *

A man came into the little restaurant, where Duke was eating, and
exploded the news to everybody.

“Luck Sleed is goin’ to run the Silver Bar! She’s done fired Fire French
and his whole outfit.”

For a few moments the restaurant buzzed with the news. Duke Steele made
no comments, but smiled softly to himself, as he paid for his meal and
went down the street to the Mojave gambling house.

French was standing at the bar, laughing with the crowd, which was
partaking of the Mojave hospitality, but he sobered quickly at the sight
of Duke Steele. Slim Curlew sized up the newcomer carefully. He had
heard of French’s downfall and was curious to see this young wildcat.

But French, in spite of his previous trouble, was diplomatic enough to
drop all reference to it and introduced Duke to Curlew and Pete Black.
None of them shook hands, but Curlew drew Duke aside. “Did Le Moyne tell
yuh what to do up here?” he asked hoarsely. Curlew had a whiskey voice,
which was almost asthmatic in quality.

Duke shook his head. “No, I’m not under orders from anybody.”

“Tha’s funny,” observed Curlew. “Le Moyne ain’t in the habit of doin’
things like that. He usually tells yuh what to do, and he sees that yuh
do it, too.”

“Yeah?” Duke seemed amused, and his smile did not set any too well with
Curlew.

“You fellers are afraid of Le Moyne, ain’t yuh?” asked Duke.

“I don’t sabe you.” Curlew shook his head, ignoring Duke’s question. He
was afraid to talk business to Duke, for fear that Duke might have been
sent to Calico on a secret mission.

“Don’t let that bother yuh,” grinned Duke. “Lotsa folks don’t sabe me,
Curlew. Le Moyne don’t.”

Curlew nodded and shoved his hands deeply into his pockets. “Heard about
the Silver Bar, didn’t yuh, Steele?”

Duke laughed. “I heard a girl was goin’ to run it, if that’s what yuh
mean.”

“Yeah. That can’t last, though; Le Moyne will see to that.”

“I reckon so. Got a place where a feller can sleep? I didn’t get much
sleep on that stage.”

“Sure, I can fix yuh up, Steele.”

Curlew led the way to a short stairway, which led to the rooms at the
rear, and opened the door of his own private room. It was roughly
furnished, but the bunk looked good to Duke Steele.

“Won’t nobody bother yuh here,” stated Curlew. “Sleep as long as yuh
want to.”

He went back down the stairs and joined French and Black at the bar.

“What do yuh think of him?” queried French.

“Look out for him,” warned Curlew. “I’ve got a hunch that Le Moyne sent
him in here to spy on us. He’s too damned independent to just be a
helper.”

“Do yuh reckon Le Moyne’s suspicious that we’re----” began Black
nervously.

“Shut up!” interrupted French. “If Le Moyne’s suspicious that we’re
high-gradin’ his mines or holdin’ out on the gamblin’ money--let him. A
big crook like Le Moyne is always suspicious. If this Steele is his spy,
go easy. We’ve got to play soft with him, boys. Bumpin’ him off might be
easy, but it would start Le Moyne on our trail in no time.”

“He’ll have a hard time provin’ anythin’,” growled Curlew. “Whatcha
goin’ to do about the Silver Bar?”

“I’m sendin’ word to Le Moyne tonight,” said French, “and we’ll let
things go as they are until we hear from him. He’ll know how to handle
it.”

“Then we keep our hands off this Steele, eh?” queried Black.

“If you know what’s good for yuh,” replied French, absently caressing
his sore jaw.

                   *       *       *       *       *

The news spread quickly in Calico, and when the stars peeped over the
hills, Sunshine Alley spewed its polyglot horde into the main street.
The Silver Bar was overcrowded. Never before had the play been as big,
nor had liquor flowed in such quantities.

Duke Steele awoke and looked at his watch. It was nine o’clock, and he
wondered at the lack of noise from the gambling room. It took him only a
moment to dress, and he walked slowly through the big room, paying no
attention to the idle attendants. On the sidewalk he met Curlew and
French, who were coming to the Mojave.

“The girl is gettin’ a big play, is she?” he asked.

Curlew swore softly and looked back toward the Silver Bar.

“Just somethin’ new,” grunted French. “We’ll have ’em all back tomorrow
night.”

Duke walked on and crowded his way inside. The room was a roaring hive
of sound; the rattle of poker chips, clinking of glasses, the screech of
a fiddle, shuffling of many rough boots and the discord of many tongues.

A solid cloud of tobacco smoke eddied about the low ceiling, fogging the
yellow oil lights; swooping down and making faces and forms grotesque
and indistinct. Duke elbowed his way to the center of the room. It was
like being in the midst of a herd of animals.

Suddenly he saw Luck Sleed. She was standing against the end of the bar,
dressed in black. Her face was very white and the misty-yellow lights
only seemed to add a copper sheen to her hair. She seemed oddly out of
place in there.

A man started to squirm past Duke, but looked into his face and stopped.
The man was Mica Cates and he had recognized Duke Steele. Duke
remembered him, too, and smiled.

“Well, you came back, eh?” said Mica, and started to say something else,
but was shoved away by several more men who were going toward the bar.

Duke shoved past them and worked his way to a place beside Luck. For
several moments she did not look his way, and when she did there was no
sign of recognition. Her eyes strayed back to the crowd, and Duke smiled
softly. It was all so new to her, in spite of the fact that she had
lived in Calico for a long time.

“It’s a big night, Miss Luck,” said Duke.

She turned and looked at him, as she might have looked at any of the
miners who had spoken to her that night, and nodded. Again she started
to turn away, but her eyes came back to his face. For several moments
she stared at him.

“You?” she gasped wonderingly. “You?”

“Yes’m, it’s me,” said Duke softly.

She moved in closer, still staring at him, and grasped him by the arm.

“I’ve looked--wondered, I mean,” she stammered, a flush coloring her
white cheeks.

“You’ve changed a lot in a year,” said Duke. “Why, you was only a little
kid.”

They looked at each other, oblivious of the noise of the room.

“Why did you stay here, Luck?” asked Duke.

“I wanted to see you. I heard about the money you won that night. Nobody
would ever tell me how much it was.”

“Shucks, I thought everybody had forgotten that.”

“How much was it?” asked Luck.

“I dunno,” smiled Duke. “It doesn’t matter, anyway.”

“But I want to pay it to you--an honest debt,” insisted Luck. “How much
was it?”

Duke shook his head and smiled down at her, but suddenly the smile faded
and he took her by the arm, roughly.

“My God, was that why you stayed here? To pay that old gamblin’ debt,
Luck?”

Luck looked away from him, as she said, “I knew I’d never see you again
if I went away, but I was sure you’d come back here some day.”

Duke looked at her and around at the mass of men. He knew that Luck had
stayed in a place she hated, just waiting for him to come back and get
that money. And he had come back at last--not to collect a debt, but to
help another man deprive her of everything.

Right now she was starting in to buck the most powerful man in the
desert country; a man who would show her about as much mercy as a
wounded grizzly would show. It was a forlorn hope for the frail
girl--bucking a power she did not know about as yet. Duke looked at her
and wondered if she would defy Le Moyne, if she knew what he intended to
do.

A man had moved in close beside him and he turned to see the little
Chinaman looking around, his face as inscrutable as a piece of yellow
parchment. Louie Yen had never been in there before. It was no place for
an Oriental. He caught Luck’s eye and smiled.

“I come play li’l pokah, li’l gi’l,” he grinned, and then looked at
Duke Steele closely.

“I sabe yo’,” he said. “Yo’ come back, eh?”

“I knew he’d come back, Louie Yen,” said Luck.

“Tha’s ve’y nice,” replied Louie. “Long time wish, bimeby come. I go
now.”

Louie Yen shuffled away into the crowd, heading toward the door. Duke
looked after him, a queer expression in his eyes. Then he turned to
Luck.

“He never came in here to gamble.”

“No?” queried Luck.

Duke shook his head and smiled. “That Chinaman had a knife two feet long
up his sleeve.”

Luck glanced toward the door and back at Duke.

“Louie Yen is my friend. I haven’t many in Calico.”

“You don’t need many of that kind,” smiled Duke, and then, seriously,
“Luck, this is no place for you. You can’t stand this kind of a life.”

“I’ve been told that before, Duke Steele.”

“I wondered if you remembered my name, Luck,” and then softly, “these
men have no respect for any girl, Luck. The spawn of the devil work in
these mines.”

An altercation had broken out in the center of the room and the crowd
surged toward that point. Blows were being exchanged, curses hurled
freely. The room became a shoving, shouting mass of men. A table crashed
to the floor. Suddenly a bottle whizzed over their heads--a flash of
glass in the whirling smoke--and Duke Steele flung up his right hand and
knocked it spinning, just as it was about to hit Luck in the face.

The heavy bottle numbed his hand and wrist, but he flung himself
headlong into the mob, like a football player diving into the midst of a
scrimmage. He had seen the man who threw the bottle; caught just a
glimpse of his face in the hazy light.

Three men were in a clinch, struggling, doing little to hurt each other.
One of them was Pete Black and the other two were miners from the Nola
mine. Duke’s rush carried him against them, and like a flash he caught
Black by his big, red beard with both hands and fairly flung him off his
feet into the close-packed mob.

The other two fighting miners drew apart and considered this newcomer.
Neither of them bore any marks of conflict. The crowd howled loudly at
the interruption, but Black scrambled back to his feet, his face
distorted with rage and suffering. Some of his beard still dangled from
Duke Steele’s clenched fists.

Black was the bigger of the two, powerful as a grizzly, but slow to
start. Duke Steele did not wait a moment. As Black surged to his feet,
Duke stepped into him, driving his left fist flush into Black’s face.
The blow was well timed and it set Black back onto his heels. But Black
was no coward. He dropped into a crouch and covered clumsily, as he
advanced slowly. Twice Duke ripped overhand blows to the bridge of
Black’s nose, but the big man only shook his head.

“Look out for his feet!” yelled a voice. “Black’s a kicker!”

The warning came just in time. Quick as a flash, Black kicked straight
for Duke’s midriff, but Duke had sidestepped, set himself for the punch,
and as Black’s kick met only the empty air, which caused him to
momentarily lose his balance, Duke drove a terrific uppercut to his
unprotected jaw.

For several moments, Black pawed at the air, tottered on his legs and
went down in a crumpled heap. The miners shouted with drunken glee and
tried to pick Duke up on their shoulders, but he managed to escape them
and went back to where he had left Luck. She was not there.

Duke drew himself up on the bar and searched the crowd, but there was no
sign of her. The mob still yelped and surged about the room, their
appetite whetted for anything now. Duke dropped down and forced his way
to the doorway.

He gulped in a mouthful of fresh air and went out into the deserted
street. His hands were cut and bleeding, and his right hand and wrist
were swelling from the impact of the heavy bottle.

He wanted to find Luck, and he wondered if she had been frightened and
run home. He knew where she lived, and he mechanically traveled up the
hill toward her home. A dark blotch in the shadow of a building
attracted his attention and he stopped to investigate. It was the
crumpled figure of a man, and when he lifted the face to the moonlight
he looked down into the features of Louie Yen.

There was a great blue welt above his left eye, but he was still
breathing. Duke picked him up in his arms and from the rocky street came
the clank of metal. It was Louie Yen’s knife, which had fallen from his
nerveless hand.

Duke picked up the long knife and glanced at it. The blade was
discolored with blood.

“Got a little action, anyway, Louie Yen,” he muttered, as he crossed the
street, wondering where he could take the wounded Chinaman. Suddenly he
saw Louie’s sign, which dangled before his little shack, and into this
he carried its owner.

There was a smell of wet clothes, strong soap and of many meals. He
placed Louie on a hard bunk, drew down the shade on the only window,
fastened the door and lighted the grimy oil lamp. Louie Yen mumbled to
himself, while Duke bathed his head in lukewarm water from the barrel in
the corner of the room. The blow on the head had knocked the Chinaman
out, but Duke could find no other wounds on him. It appeared to have
been a glancing blow, probably struck with the barrel of a six-shooter,
and intended to smash Louie Yen’s skull.

Then Louie’s eyes opened and he stared up at Duke. He turned his head
and looked around the room and then tried to sit up. Duke had placed the
knife on a rough table near the bunk, and now Louie looked keenly at it.

“Better take it easy,” advised Duke, but Louie sat up and his slant eyes
seemed to fairly blaze in his yellow face, as he pointed a claw-like
hand toward the door. For a moment his tongue seemed paralyzed, but when
the words did come they were like the crackle of pistol shots.

“Yo’ go ’way from here!”

“Loco,” thought Duke instantly.

Louie spat something in the Chinese tongue, which might have been a
terrible curse, so earnestly was it spoken.

“How does your head feel?” asked Duke.

Louie shook his head vehemently, still pointing at the door. “I sabe
yo’! Yo’ go quick now!”

There was no doubt that Louie was deadly serious and not at all insane.
Duke grinned and nodded, “All right, old-timer. Don’t get all heated
up.”

But Duke backed toward the door. He was not taking any chances on Louie
Yen, who was leaning forward off the bed, his slant eyes watching Duke
with blazing hatred. Duke reached the door, unbarred it and started to
go out; as Louie Yen flung himself forward to the table. His arm jerked
up and backward; a silvery flash of light across the room, and the long
knife tore a splinter of wood from the door casing and was caught tight
as the door slammed shut behind Duke Steele.

Duke whirled and looked at the knife blade. The throw had been almost
perfect, but Louie had delayed too long. Duke shuddered, as he walked
back down the street. Louie’s act had been so quick that it would have
been almost impossible for Duke to have drawn a gun and stopped Louie
ahead of the throw.

“Now, what made him do that?” wondered Duke. “Why did he try to kill
me? He wasn’t crazy, not a bit.”

Duke stopped in the shadow of a building and tried to figure it out.
Suddenly he realized that he was not wearing a hat. He had lost it in
the Silver Bar, and he wondered grimly if there was anything left of his
costly sombrero.

He went back to the Silver Bar, but was unable to make any search on
account of the mob. Again he looked for Luck, but she was nowhere in
sight. Black was not there either, but in a few minutes he saw Slim
Curlew at a roulette table.

Someone spoke to him and he turned to see Fire French grinning at him.
French invited him to have a drink, but Duke refused.

“Seen anythin’ of our fair gamblin’-hall maiden?” asked French.

Duke shook his head.

“Where’s your hat?” asked French, grinning.

“Lost it in a fight,” replied Duke coldly, “and I reckon it’s been
tromped plumb to bed-rock by this time.”

“Fight?” French was interested.

“With your friend, Black.”

“Oh!” French squinted closely at Duke. He knew that Black was a bad man
in a fight, and he wondered how it could be that Duke Steele still had
his being. Black usually put the boots to his victims, but Duke Steele
did not seem to be suffering.

“Just a conversational battle?”

Duke lifted a swollen and cut pair of hands. “Look like it was, French?
I reckon I made a soup-eater out of Black. The son-of-a-jackass tried to
kick me, but I was lookin’ for it. I hate a kicker.”

“Yeah?” marveled French. “And then what?”

“Nothin’. He just stayed down, thassall.”

“Thassall, eh?” French shook his head. “Steele, you can’t do things like
that here. Black is one of Le Moyne’s best men. Didn’t yuh know that?”

“Then Le Moyne is a damn poor judge of men,” retorted Duke. “The more I
hear about Le Moyne the more I think he’s a big, greasy bluffer. If Pete
Black is the type of men that Le Moyne is usin’ in his big game, Le
Moyne is due to lose. They say that a chain is only as strong as its
weakest link, French; Le Moyne’s chain has got a lot of weak links. He
made a mistake in hirin’ tin-horn crooks to sit in a big game.”

French’s jaw muscles tightened and his eyes twitched, but he managed to
control himself. A burning hatred of this cold-eyed young man seared his
soul, but he was afraid. Then, without a word, he turned and went out of
the Silver Bar.

Duke grinned softly. He knew that French was afraid of him. Calico was
going to be an unhealthy place for him, he knew. Somewhere was Pete
Black, minus several teeth and much prestige. Miners are quick to back a
fighter, but, like the rest of humanity, are quick to lose confidence in
a man after he has been whipped.

Duke left the Silver Bar and went to the Mojave. A few miners were in
there, but the Mojave was far from being a lively place. He went back to
Curlew’s room, barred the door and went to bed, wondering what had
become of Luck Sleed, wondering why the Chinaman had spat at him and
threw the long knife at his back.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Cartier Le Moyne was an early riser. Long before the first tints of dawn
painted the desert sky he could be found in his office, poring over
smelter reports, planning further conquests. The smelter belonged to Le
Moyne, but no one, except Le Moyne and the general manager, knew this.

This morning Le Moyne’s face was drawn in a deep scowl, as he looked
over the reports and read the name of “Telluride” Taylor. Opposite his
name was a credit of five hundred dollars. Each monthly report showed a
big net for Taylor. His ore was the richest in the desert.

Time after time had Le Moyne’s men tried to trail Taylor to his mine,
but he always managed to fade away into the desert, leaving them
baffled. Then, silently herding his pack-train of burros, he would
appear in Cactus City and unload at the smelter.

Le Moyne had grown to hate Taylor, although he admired his skill in
covering the trail. If one man, working alone, with only a few burros
for transportation, could bring in such wealth, what could Le Moyne do
with a force of men?

Le Moyne tossed the reports into a drawer, got to his feet and went back
to his stable, where he kept a horse. He was too unsettled to work; so
he saddled the horse and rode away into the desert, going out the Calico
road.

Far away in the distance the sun was striking the black peaks, making
them appear as golden cones on an ebony base. A few minutes later the
light changed to a violet hue, shot with gold, changing suddenly to a
deep amber, shot with cobalt streaks. It was like the fading out of one
tint and the fading in of another on a motion picture screen.

Then the world seemed to grow brighter as the harsh light of morning
drove away the soft-hued tints, and the desert stood out in its true
colors.

Le Moyne rode slowly, looking out upon the desert, as a baron of old
might have looked upon a land he intended to conquer. It was not a fair
land in the light of day, but to Le Moyne it meant wealth and power.

He left the road and rode slowly to a brushy hillock, where a group of
Joshua-palms, the “Dancing Jaspers” of the desert, grew thickly. A
jack-rabbit scooted from in front of him and bounced like a gray shadow
up the slope, and a coyote, as gray as the desert brush, gave him one
glance and limped away into the heavy cover.

Near the top of the hillock Le Moyne drew rein. Far down the road came
the stage from Calico, a thin cloud of dust blowing away from it in the
slight breeze. To Le Moyne’s ears came the faint tinkle of a bell.

He moved further into the cover of the palms and watched the stage
coming swiftly. To his ears came the tinkle, tinkle of a bell again, and
it seemed to be on the far side of the hill. He watched the stage until
it was near enough to be hidden from his sight.

Minute after minute passed, still the stage did not come into sight.
There was no reason for the delay. Then he turned his horse and rode
around the side of the hill, seeking to find why the stage had stopped,
but before he reached the point of the hill the stage drove past him and
went on toward Cactus City.

Le Moyne lit a cigar and watched the stage fade out in a haze of dust.
The sun was already growing hot, so he turned and rode down the hill.
Again he heard the tiny tinkle of the bell, but this time the sound of
it was continuous, as though the animal wearing it was traveling
steadily.

He turned and rode around the point of the hill, where he met a herd of
five burros, heavily laden with sacks of ore, and behind them came a
weather-beaten prospector carrying a rifle over his shoulder.

It was Telluride Taylor, with his shipment of rich silver ore, heading
toward the smelter. Le Moyne did not wait to meet him, but turned and
rode back toward Cactus City.

Suddenly he drew rein and his eyes narrowed in thought. Something had
just occurred to him; something that burned into his soul like a
white-hot brand. Had the stage stopped there to unload those sacks of
high-grade silver ore? Was Telluride Taylor waiting there to receive the
stolen ore?

These thoughts caused Le Moyne to straighten up in his saddle and curse
witheringly. If that was a fact, it was easy to see why his hired men
had never been able to trail Telluride to his treasure mine. They were
in partnership to beat him. Right now they were laughing at Le Moyne;
stealing from him, while they took his pay.

In a haze of anger he rode back and stabled his horse. He was too wise
to shout his knowledge to the four winds, and there was no trace of
anger in him when he met the stage-driver and received the report from
Fire French. The written report read:

    Let us know what you expect of Steele. Do not know where to use
    him. Acts like he owned the town and seems to be looking for
    trouble. Will not take orders from anyone. Luck Sleed fired
    me and all the gang from the Silver Bar and is going to try
    to run it herself. Tell us what you want done. Black says
    everything is going good.
                                                            French.

Le Moyne read the message carefully. Things were not going at all well
with him, but he smiled at the reference to Duke Steele looking for
trouble.

“I dunno what got into that danged girl,” said the driver. “She ain’t
showin’ much sense.”

Le Moyne looked coldly at him, as he folded up the message and said,
“I’ll go to Calico with you tonight.”

“All right,” said the driver slowly. “Mebbe that’ll help some.

“I think it will,” meaningly, “in more ways than one.”

Le Moyne turned and crossed the street just ahead of Telluride Taylor’s
string of burros, but did not even look at Telluride. The driver watched
him go into his office and squinted thoughtfully.

“In more ways than one, eh?” he muttered. “Jist what in hell did he mean
by that, do yuh suppose?”

As there was no one there to answer the question, the driver shook his
head and went seeking a bed.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Mica Cates had also spent a bad night. Somehow he felt responsible for
Luck, wanted to help her, but she was nowhere to be found. A miner had
told him about the big fight between Black and the newcomer, and he had
gone back to the Silver Bar, but could not find anybody who knew what
had become of Luck.

One of the bartenders remembered seeing her talking with Duke Steele,
but had not seen her after the fight. Nearly all night Mica had sat on
Luck’s doorstep, waiting for her, wondering what had happened to her. It
was after daylight when he came down the street to Louie Yen’s laundry.
The door was closed, but Mica opened it and peered inside.

Louie Yen was humped up on a box beside his ironing board, his head
swathed in bandages. He was smoking a long pipe, while he slowly whetted
his long knife with a tiny hone.

“Hyah, Louie,” greeted Mica, coming inside. “Seen anythin’ of Luck?”

Louie stopped honing and stared at Mica. His old face seemed to have
aged years in one night.

“Yo’ no find?” he asked softly.

“Dang it all--no!” Mica was very positive. “I’ve looked all over for
her, Louie. What happened to you?”

Louie’s hand went to his bandage and he shook his head.

“You don’t know?” asked Mica.

“I know,” nodded Louie. “Mebbe know too much; yo’ sabe?”

“Thasso? Whatcha mean, Louie?”

“Know too much, mebbe die,” ominously.

“Aw, shucks! What’s got into yuh?” Louie picked up his hone and knife
and began to put a razor edge on the long knife. The room was silent,
but for the keen, wheen, wheen, of the hone against fine steel.

“Yuh make me nervous,” complained Mica, “I asked yuh if yuh knew where
Luck Sleed is, but yuh never said.”

“No can do,” Louie shook his head, but did not look up. “I hear two men
talk in dark las’ night. Louie Yen ki’p very quiet.”

He tested the blade on the ball of his thumb and began honing again,
while he continued in a sing-song tone, “One man say want li’l gi’l and
other man say why wait fo’ big man say what to do? Yo’ takum now. One
man say we fixum scheme. They go ’way. Louie Yen no can go to see. Louie
Yen bimeby gonsee li’l gi’l and fin’ li’l gi’l talk to one man.

“Louie Yen go outside, see what can fin’. Bimeby big fight. Louie Yen
see two men in dark, carry li’l gi’l. She scream, but no can make hear.
Louie Yen hear. Louie Yen try catch li’l gi’l. No can do.”

Louie pointed to the bandage on his head and again he tested the edge of
his knife.

“Somebody steal her?” gasped Mica, getting to his feet.

Louie nodded slowly and the lines deepened in his old yellow face.

“Louie,” Mica’s voice quavered, “Louie, do yuh know who it was?”

“No can do,” Louie shook his head. “One man wear big hat--w’ite hat; yo’
sabe?”

“With silver trimmin’?” asked Mica quickly.

“Yes-s-s,” answered Louie. “Yo’ sabe now?”

Mica nodded quickly. He knew that Duke Steele was the only man in Calico
who wore that kind of headgear.

“No sabe?” Louie shook his head. “W’y he steal li’l gi’l? Long time she
look fo’ him. Plenty glad fo’ see him.”

“I don’t sabe it either, Louie. Who do yuh reckon they meant when they
spoke about the big man? Who is he?”

“No can tell, Mica. He say not wait fo’ big man. Bimeby we fin’ out.
Ah-h-h-h!” Louie’s gnarled thumb tested the edge of the knife and had
found it perfect. He picked up his pipe and began smoking.

“Well, ain’t we goin’ look for her?” demanded Mica impatiently.

“No can do,” Louie shook his head. “Hunt now, never fin’; yo’ sabe? Li’l
gi’l plenty safe now. Too much look, mebbe almos’ fin’--no safe.”

“You reckon they can’t afford to let us find her?”

“Um-m-m. Eyes no good fo’ hunt now. Somebody talk bimeby.”

“All right, Louie, but I sure want to git m’ hands on the dirty coyotes
that stole her.”

“Plenty time; yo’ wait,” advised Louie softly.

Mica nodded and went outside. It was blistering hot and not even a dog
was in sight on the street. He went slowly down past the Silver Bar and
into the Mojave. Duke Steele was sitting at a card table, playing
solitaire.

He smiled and nodded at Mica, who sat down at the table. Mica noticed
that Duke was not wearing a hat and there was no sign of the hat on the
table nor on any of the chairs. Neither of the men spoke. It was
stifling hot in there and finally Duke threw the cards aside and leaned
back in his chair.

“This country ain’t cooled off none since I was here a year ago,”
observed Duke. He had placed his hands on the table, and Mica could see
that they were swollen and bruised. Duke noticed Mica’s glance and
grinned.

“Compliments of Pete Black,” he remarked, indicating his hands. “Have
yuh seen him today?”

Mica shook his head. He had heard of the fight.

Duke studied Mica Cates for a while and then leaned across the table
toward him, as he asked softly, “Do you know where Luck Sleed is,
Cates?”

Mica shook his head. “No, do you?”

Duke smiled and shook his head, “No, but I’d sure like to, y’betcha.”

Mica could not help feeling that Duke was in earnest. Either that, or he
was a good actor and wanted to find out how much Mica Cates knew.

“When did yuh see her last?” queried Mica.

“Just before I fought with Pete Black. I was talkin’ with her when the
fight started and I took a hand in it. When the fight was over she had
disappeared.”

Mica blinked over this information, but he was not going to let Duke
Steele know his suspicions. Then, before he thought, he blurted the
question, “Steele, who is the big man you’re workin’ for?”

Duke stared closely at Mica and leaned slowly back in his chair. “Big
man?” he asked. “What do yuh mean, Cates?”

“You know what I mean, Steele.”

“Do I?” Duke smiled at Mica’s anxious face.

“Listen,” said Mica, “I ain’t sayin’ I ain’t afraid of you, Steele.
You’ve licked two good men with your hands since you came here, and I
sabe what you can do with a gun, but,” Mica stopped and leaned closer,
“but jist the same I’m askin’ yuh what yuh done with Luck Sleed?”

“What I done with her?” Duke’s smile was gone now and his voice was
hard. “Would I be lookin’ for her, if I knew where she is, Cates?”

Cates shook his head, but was unconvinced.

“What do yuh mean by ‘big man’?” demanded Duke.

Mica licked his lips slowly, but decided to try and bluff it through.

“You and another man talked about a big man last night, Steele; and it
sounds like you was workin’ for him. One of yuh wanted Luck Sleed and
decided to steal her. That fight was jist a blind to steal her out of
the crowd.”

Duke squinted closely at Mica, whose face was beaded with perspiration,
and a glimmer of understanding came to him.

“Did you hear me talkin’ to another man?” demanded Duke. Mica shook his
head.

“Then how do yuh figure it was me?”

“One of the men that stole Luck Sleed was wearin’ a big, white sombrero,
with silver trimmin’s, Steele. Where is your hat?”

Duke shook his head. “Pardner, I reckon the verdict is easy to read. I’m
much obliged to yuh, just the same.”

He leaned over and picked up the cards, paying no attention to Mica, who
got to his feet and went back to the street. At the doorway he looked
back at Duke, who was building another solitaire layout.

Mica scratched his head and tried to review just what Duke Steele had
said. He had not told who the big man was, nor had he admitted stealing
Luck Sleed. Somehow, Mica felt that Duke Steele had had nothing to do
with it. He had thanked Mica for some information, but Mica was not
aware that he had explained anything to him.

                   *       *       *       *       *

That night, French, Black and Curlew met in Curlew’s room at the rear of
the Mojave. Black’s lips were puffed and discolored, one eye was as
purple as a plum and all of his front teeth were missing. He had not
been able to eat solid food that day and whiskey was a torture to his
sore lips and mouth.

French was in sympathy with Black, because his own jaw was still sore
from Duke Steele’s fist, but Curlew was rather amused at both of them.

“I’ll kill him, if it’s the last thing I ever do,” declared Black. “I
don’t care a damn what Le Moyne says.”

“If I was goin’ to kill him, I’d hire it done,” said Curlew. “After
seein’ what he done to both of you fellers, I’m workin’ shy of that
hombre. Is he such a hell of a fighter, or are you jaspers overrated?”

French and Black made no reply. Curlew knew that both of them were well
known as fighters, and he was only joking them about their recent
defeats.

“He’s a gunman, too,” said French, as though admitting that Steele was a
good fighter with his fists. “A year ago he kinda cleaned up around
here.”

“Whatcha tryin’ to do, scare yourself or us?” demanded Black.

“I’m tellin’ yuh some history, Black.”

“History don’t repeat itself, French. I ain’t a danged bit scared of
this hard-headed fool, even if you are.”

“Still, yuh don’t know him and Le Moyne are hooked up,” said French.
“I’d advise layin’ off him until we hear from Le Moyne and see where
this feller stands.”

Came a knock on the door, but before anyone could speak, a man came into
the room. He was grimy from the desert and his face was brick-red from
the intense heat.

“Just got in,” he informed them huskily. “Damn horse went down on me
about three miles down the road and I had to walk the rest of the way.”

“What’s the idea, Pell?” asked French nervously.

The newcomer picked up a bottle of liquor from the table and took a long
drink.

“Plumb dried out inside,” he explained, sitting down on the bunk and
half-removing his boots before he continued.

“Telluride sent me in. Said that he got the ore, but that he saw Le
Moyne about a minute after he got loaded, and he’s plumb scared that Le
Moyne saw them. He went over and woke up the stage-driver and he said
that Le Moyne was comin’ to Calico with him t’night.”

“Hell!” exploded French, getting nervously to his feet.

“Hang onto yourself!” snapped Curlew.

“You’re as nervous as an old lady, French. Mebbe he didn’t see nothin’.”

“And if he did?” said Black ominously. “Are we goin’ to eat dirt for Le
Moyne? You’d think he was the devil himself.”

The man called Pell helped himself to more liquor, while the other three
men pondered deeply.

“If yuh want my advice,” said Black, “I’d say that we better get rid of
this Steele right away. Yuh know damn well that he’s sweet on Luck
Sleed, French.”

“Lot of good it’s doin’ him,” grinned French.

“If trouble started in the Silver Bar tonight, and Steele happened to be
there,” suggested Curlew meaningly, “Le Moyne never hired us to take
care of Steele.”

French got to his feet again and paced the length of the room several
times. He stopped at the table and looked at Black and Curlew, who had
been watching him.

“Black is right,” declared French. “Why should we eat dirt for Le Moyne?
Is he any better than we are? Let’s take Calico for ourselves, and to
hell with Le Moyne! I’m tired of taking orders from him. When he shows
up here he’s as helpless as any other man, ain’t he? How about it?”

“That’s the idea,” applauded Black. “We won’t only set into the big
game, but we’ll run it, eh?”

“And take the rakeoff for ourselves,” nodded Curlew.

Pell finished the bottle and went back into the saloon, where he got a
couple of more drinks and went out. Duke Steele was in the room. He had
seen Pell enter the room, and knew that Black, Curlew and French were in
there.

Pell was just a trifle unsteady on his legs, as he went out into the
street, and Duke had no difficulty in shadowing him. Several times Pell
stopped and looked back, but Duke kept to the heavy shadows. Down near
where the road sloped sharply off into the desert, Pell stopped and
spoke a word. A moment later another man joined him and Duke heard the
husky voice of Le Moyne, as he talked to Pell.

Duke was unable to get close enough to find out what the conversation
was about, but he heard Le Moyne tell Pell to stable the horses where no
one would see them, and a few moments later Le Moyne passed Duke’s
hiding-place, going slowly toward the lighted street.

As soon as he was safely past, Duke circled back to the upper end of the
street. He was curious to know just why Le Moyne had come secretly to
Calico. Something had gone wrong with his plans, that much was sure, and
Duke thought it might concern the disappearance of Luck Sleed.

He felt sure, after what he had learned from Mica Cates, that French and
Curlew were the ones that had kidnapped Luck. There was no question in
his mind but what the fight had been started to attract the attention of
the crowd, and that Black had thrown the bottle to draw him away from
Luck. Of course, Black had not expected it to turn out so badly for him.

Duke had lost his hat, which was not part of their plans, but one of
them had worn it, possibly on the chance that they might shift the blame
in case they were seen by anyone on the street. It was fairly clear to
Duke now, the reasons for Louie Yen’s hatred. “No doubt,” thought Duke,
“the Chinaman recognized me by the hat, because there was not another
hat like it in Calico.”

Duke had come in beside Louie Yen’s laundry and now he stopped near the
corner. A man was coming toward him, and Duke thought that this might
possibly be Le Moyne. As he drew back into the deeper shadows something
descended upon his head, knocking him flat on his face.

Dimly he heard voices and felt someone dragging him into the house. In a
hazy way he felt them binding his hands, but was unable to prevent them.
Gradually the roaring noise died out of his ears and he came back to
almost full consciousness, but he did not open his eyes nor try to move.

His nose informed him that he was inside of Louie Yen’s laundry and that
Louie was talking to someone in his own peculiar pidgin-English.

“Bimeby he talk now, yo’ sabe? Louie Yen fin’ out.”

“That’s a damn heathen way of doin’ things,” replied Mica Cates’ voice.
“I wouldn’t do it, Louie.”

“I watch him,” stated Louie. “He walk after man, who meet one man. One
man ve’y big, yo’ sabe?”

“Thasso?” Mica was interested. “And then you trailed Steele up here and
hit him on the head.”

“Yes-s-s, like yo’ see. Bimeby this man tell where is li’l gi’l, yo’
sabe?”

“How hot do yuh have to git them irons?” asked Mica.

“Plenty hot.”

Louie got up and shuffled softly into the rear room. Duke’s eyes flashed
open. He was lying in the middle of the floor, flat on his back, with
both hands tied behind him. Mica Cates was standing near him, watching
him closely.

“Cates,” Duke whispered softly, “does that Chinaman think I know where
Luck Sleed is hidden?”

Mica glanced swiftly toward the rear, dropped on his hands and knees and
with a swift motion of a knife, cut Duke’s hands loose.

“Gun’s on the table,” he breathed.

But Duke did not move. Louie Yen was coming in from the rear room,
carrying a flat-iron, the handle of which was heavily wrapped in rags.
There was a smell of burning cloth, as Louie Yen knelt at the feet of
Duke Steele and placed the hot iron on the floor.

Duke had drawn up his feet, and as Louie took hold of one of his boots
Duke shoved him violently aside, sprang to his feet, grasped the
six-shooter and whirled to look down at the little old Chinaman,
sprawled on the floor.

Louie Yen was not looking at Duke, but at the strands of rope on the
floor; strands which had been cut with a very sharp knife. Then he got
slowly to his feet, shook his head sadly and sat down on a box; a very
sorrowful looking old Chinaman.

“I had t’ do it, Louie Yen,” said Mica softly. “He’s a white man.”

Duke studied the two of them, pitied them in their puny efforts to get
information of Luck Sleed.

“Yuh don’t need to feel bad about it, Louie,” said Duke consolingly.
“Burnin’ my feet wouldn’t make me tell where that girl is, ’cause I
don’t know. I lost my hat in the fight and somebody stole it. I found
you out there in the street.”

Louie Yen’s beady eyes studied Duke’s face for a while, unblinking.

“Yo’ don’ know where is li’l gi’l?”

“No,” Duke shook his head. “Not any more than you do.”

“No can fin’,” Louie shook his head, while the hot iron sent up a vile
odor of burning cloth. Duke kicked the iron aside and felt of the lump
on his head. It was very sore, but there was little blood. Louie noticed
Duke’s actions and shook his head sadly.

“Ve’y solly,” he muttered. “Louie Yen plenty damn fool; yo’ sabe?”

“Never mind me,” grinned Duke, “I’ve got a hard head, and, I’ve got an
idea. Will you two jaspers help me work it out?”

“Tell it,” grunted Mica Cates. “We’ve tried everythin’ else.”

“Here’s what yuh got to do,” explained Duke. “One of yuh watch the rear
door and the other the front door of the Silver Bar, while I go inside.
Watch for Pete Black, French or Slim Curlew. If any of them come out,
follow ’em and find out where they go. Do yuh understand?”

“Mo’ bettah,” nodded Louie Yen, getting to his feet.

“And look out,” warned Duke. “Hell is due to bust loose in Calico
tonight, unless I can’t read signs, and we’re liable to get singed a
little.”

“Let her bust,” replied Mica.

Duke turned to the door. “You fellers wait a minute, ’cause I don’t want
to be seen with yuh.”

Duke went down the street and into the Silver Bar. There was a fair
sized crowd inside, but the place was orderly. Pete Black was at a
poker-table, French was at a roulette layout, and Curlew was standing at
the bar, talking to the man named Pell, who had brought the message to
them from Telluride Taylor.

Bud Harvey was one of the bartenders, and he nodded pleasantly to Duke,
who stepped in beside Curlew and Pell.

“Miss Luck ain’t got here yet, has she?” asked Duke.

Bud Harvey shook his head. “No, I ain’t seen her today and I was
wonderin’ if she wasn’t comin’ down tonight. None of the boys has seen
her today.”

“She’s been away,” said Duke casually, “but she ought to be here pretty
quick.”

Duke felt that Curlew had turned and was looking at him, but he calmly
poured out his drink and paid for it. Then he sauntered toward the rear
of the room and moved in beside a faro layout, where he could turn,
facing the room.

Curlew walked part way to the door with Pell, but left him and went
straight to the poker game and spoke to Pete Black, who got out of his
chair. Only a word was exchanged, and Black turned to cash in his chips.

Duke glanced at French, who was watching Black and Curlew. Curlew
signaled cautiously to French and walked slowly back to the bar,
followed in a moment by Black. None of them looked toward Duke, but he
knew that three pairs of eyes were watching him.

To anyone else it would seem that these three men were having a friendly
drink, but Duke felt that this conference might mean a lot to him. They
finished their drink and all walked over to the roulette layout,
laughing. Duke walked toward the rear of the room, where the two-piece
orchestra was screeching out a discordant tune, and when he turned and
looked toward the roulette game, Pete Black was not there. In fact he
was not in the Silver Bar. Duke grinned and sauntered down the room
until he stood near French and Curlew. A half-drunk miner came in the
door and stumbled toward the bar.

“Wha’s matter with the Mojave?” he asked loudly. “Has she gone out of
business?”

Several people looked at him curiously, and he seemed to realize that he
was the center of interest, so he continued:

“Locked up tight, zat’s what she is. Whazza matter, eh?”

French strode over to the man and grasped him by the arm.

“What do yuh mean?” he demanded.

“Mojave’s closed,” insisted the drunk. “Lights all out and a padlock on
the door.”

“What the hell does that mean?” queried Curlew. “Who would do that?”

French whirled toward the door and Curlew almost trod on his heels in
his hurry to get out and see what had happened. Duke grinned, as he
realized that this was Le Moyne’s first move, but he did not know just
what it meant. Duke did not know that Black, French and Curlew had
announced their intentions to double-cross Le Moyne, and that Le Moyne
knew this.

Duke turned and went out the back door, where he called softly, and was
joined by Mica Cates.

“Black went out the front door,” said Duke.

“Then Louie Yen is on his trail,” grinned Mica, “and that danged Chink
could trail a buzzard and never be seen.”

“And that ain’t no lie,” replied Duke. “I know it.”

As they started around the corner a bulky figure almost ran into them.
Quick as a flash, Duke whipped out his gun and covered the man, who
backed against the wall; the face of him showing clear in the
moonlight.

It was Le Moyne, dangerous as a cornered wolf, who snarled at Duke,
“You, too, eh? Well, damn you--shoot!”

Duke shook his head, but kept the muzzle of the big six-shooter leveled
at Le Moyne’s waistline.

“Not unless I have to, Le Moyne,” replied Duke.

“Better take my advice,” said Le Moyne coldly. “You’ll never have a
better chance.”

“Never want a better one,” smiled Duke. “Meet my friend Mica Cates, Mr.
Le Moyne.”

“Aw, hell!” exploded Le Moyne. “What’s the use of all this, Steele?”

“Courtesy,” replied Steele. “You fellers ain’t never met,’ and then to
Mica, “this is the big man yuh heard about, Mica.”

“You’re takin’ chances on not pullin’ that trigger,” reminded Le Moyne
coldly.

Duke laughed. “You don’t scare me, Le Moyne. You told me that you had
some good men up here, but I whipped two of them and am willin’ to try
the other one. I’ve lost all faith in you, big feller. You picked some
fine scorpions to handle this end of the big game.

“I’ve found that out,” agreed Le Moyne warmly, “and that is why I’m up
here tonight. How much have they promised you, Steele?”

“A spot in Hell’s Depot,” grinned Duke.

“What do you mean, Steele?”

“Just what I said. I didn’t like this gang and I had to whip French a
few minutes after I landed here. Last night I fought Pete Black and
moved most of his teeth. I ain’t had no chance to mix with Curlew yet.”

Le Moyne laughed harshly. “I wish I had seen it. Now, the question is
this--are you still with me, Steele?”

“Nope,” Duke shook his head, but added, “I’m not against yuh, Le Moyne,
except in one thing. You can take the Mojave desert and everythin’ in
the danged spot, except Luck Sleed’s property.”

“Yeah? Got stuck on the girl, did yuh, Steele?”

“I’m squeezin’ the trigger,” said Duke softly, “and another remark like
that finishes the deal for you. Your hired tin-horns stole her last
night, Le Moyne.”

“Not on my orders,” defended Le Moyne quickly. “Mine was a freeze-out
game--not a kidnapping. I might beat her out of what she owns, but I’m
damned if I’d injure her.”

“You’ve got a lot of control over your men, ain’t yuh?”

“I will have when I’m through with ’em,” retorted Le Moyne hotly.
“That’s why I’m up here, They don’t look for me until mornin’, but I
choked the truth out of the stage-driver. They’ve been stealin’ from me
all the time, Steele. I sent a man I could trust to tell ’em that I was
comin’ on the night stage, and they talked too much before him. They’re
goin’ to try and shove me out of Calico.”

“And you’ve only got that one man with yuh?” queried Duke. “A drunk! Do
yuh realize what you’re up against? There’s Black, French, Curlew, a
handful of gamblers and all of Black’s men from both mines. They’re all
gettin’ their share of the loot. What can one man do against that
crowd?”

“By God, I’ll show ’em what Le Moyne can do!”

“You’re a big-headed fool!” snapped Duke. “You’ve dreamed about ownin’
the desert until it’s gone to your head, Le Moyne. Wake up for a minute
and figure out just who you are. One man! Are yuh bullet-proof? Can yuh
shoot so fast that yuh can buck an army? This job will take a lot of
brains, which you ain’t got.”

Le Moyne was silent for several moments, as this seemed to percolate
through his mind. No man had ever talked like that to him before; no man
had dared to talk like that to Le Moyne. He shrugged his big shoulders
and leaned back against the building.

“Well, Steele, I never thought about it--like--that. I
guess--probably--I’ve got the--wrong--idea.”

“You ain’t exactly brainless,” remarked Duke.

“Almost,” Le Moyne smiled crookedly. “What would you do, if you was in
my place, Steele?”

“I wouldn’t try to fool myself into thinkin’ that I was all-powerful, Le
Moyne.”

“All right.” Le Moyne’s tone was almost meek.

“Got a gun?”

Le Moyne threw his coat open, disclosing a cartridge belt and two heavy
guns.

“Can yuh shoot straight?”

“No.” Le Moyne was honest. “I never was a good shot.”

“It’s a wonder yuh ever come this close to bein’ a king of the desert,”
declared Duke.

“I hired my shootin’ done,” said Le Moyne, half-humorously,
half-bitterly.

“Well, yuh ain’t got money enough to hire a trigger-finger tonight,”
declared Duke, “so yuh better forget ownin’ the desert and concentrate
on shootin’.”

“You won’t lose nothin’ by stickin’ to me,” assured Le Moyne, “neither
one of you.”

“Aw, forget the pay,” grunted Duke. “Why did yuh close up the Mojave?”

“I scared the devil out of that gang in there,” Le Moyne laughed
nervously. “They all know me. I wanted to get that bunch all together in
one place; so I cleaned out the Mojave and locked the door.”

“And by now every one of your hired crooks know that you are in Calico.
Le Moyne, you’ve got a fine chance to never leave Calico alive. There’s
only one hope left, and that hinges on the fact that you hired a bunch
of tin-horns to run your business. How much nerve have you got?”

“Why do you ask me that?” queried Le Moyne.

“Have you got nerve enough to walk into that gang and start shootin’?”

“Do we have to do that, Steele?”

“No-o-o, we can run away.”

“Feller can’t die but once.” Thus Mica Cates, speaking for the first
time since they met Le Moyne.

“I’m a poor runner,” said Le Moyne, “and there’s plenty of time to run
when we’re scared, Steele.”

“And Luck Sleed won’t lose?” queried Duke.

“Not even what Black’s gang stole,” said Le Moyne. “I’ve got the smelter
lists to check back on it, Steele.”

“You may never be a king,” observed Duke, “but you are a couple of
notches above bein’ a knave. Come on.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

French and Curlew found the Mojave padlocked and the lights out. Several
of the miners who were in the pay of Pete Black followed them. One of
the bartenders and a man who had run a roulette outfit for Curlew were
in front of the place.

“What in hell is goin’ on here?” demanded Curlew.

“Hell is right,” agreed the gambler. “Le Moyne closed the place a few
minutes ago.”

“Le Moyne!” gasped French. “Is he here?”

“He sure is,” grunted the bartender. “He’s here like a wolf, French.”

“But he wasn’t due here until mornin’,” said Curlew in a half-whisper.
“Why did he----”

“Pell,” French’s voice broke thinly. “Pell came with him, Slim! He heard
what we said about takin’ Calico for ourselves. Le Moyne knows now where
Telluride’s rich ore comes from, and he’s up here----”

“With only Pell behind him!” snapped Curlew. “Two men, and one of them
drunk! Get the gangs from both mines. Black will be back in a few
minutes.”

“Where’s Steele?” queried French nervously. “Damn him, he’s a spy of Le
Moyne’s.”

“I’ll get the gang,” said one of the miners, and ran heavily toward the
rim of Sunshine Alley.

“Get back in the shadows,” advised Curlew. “We’ll wait for the miners
and Black.”

Calico was strangely silent now. Only the yellow lights of the Silver
Bar made a greenish glow in the blue haze of moonlighted street. It was
a land of blocky, grotesque shadows, high-lighted by a moon, like a huge
globe suspended but a short distance away from the earth.

Then, from far down in Sunshine Alley came the thin, indistinct notes of
a violin; from out in the desert came the eerie wail of a half-starved
coyote. A man in the doorway of the Silver Bar laughed drunkenly and
began singing in a hoarse voice.

French cursed audibly. Men were coming up over the rim of Sunshine Alley
now, and hurrying toward the Mojave. The notes of the violin had ceased.
The man in the doorway of the Silver Bar stopped singing and went back
inside. It was Pell, the Le Moyne spy; singing to keep up his courage.

Duke Steele heard him singing, as he opened the rear door of the Silver
Bar and led Le Moyne and Mica Cates inside. The games were still running
and men were at the bar, drinking, but a silence had seemed to settle
over the room. A man cursed at Pell, who turned and came back to the
bar.

Several men glanced curiously at Le Moyne. He was so big that he towered
like a giant in the low-ceilinged room. Men were coming in both front
and rear doors now; big, hulking miners, with the colored muck of the
silver mines on their clothes.

“Look out!” called Duke at Le Moyne. “These are all Black’s men. Hell’s
due to take a recess in a minute!”

A big miner lurched into Le Moyne, staggering him. It might have been
unintentional, but Le Moyne smashed the man full in the face with a
terrific blow and the big miner spun like a top into a roulette table,
crashing it down like a mass of kindling.

A woman screamed, breaking the momentary silence after the crash; just
outside the door, from somewhere in that mass of men, came the smack of
a pistol shot. Pell, who was backed against the bar, with arms
outspread, flung his arms across his face, as though to protect himself,
and plunged headlong into the crowd.

The place was a bedlam now. Duke saw French and Curlew near the door,
but was unable to use his gun in that crush of humanity. Le Moyne was
fighting like a great grizzly, using his hands instead of his guns. Mica
Cates was lost in the confusion, but Duke felt that the little
bow-legged man was giving a good account of himself.

Duke managed to get his gun loose and was using it as a club. He had no
desire to kill the miners, but he did want to come to close quarters
with either Curlew or French. He was dazed and shaken from blows, which
seemed to rain on him from every direction. A flying bottle cut his
cheek and the blood ran into his mouth, a salty stream.

Blindly he reversed his gun and shot straight ahead, trying to clear a
path to the door. It was a case of three against thirty, and Duke knew
that it was only a question of time until the thirty would win.

He went to his knees from a smashing blow on the back of his head, but
managed to hang onto his gun. Men walked on him, fell over him, but he
surged to his feet and found himself near the door.

The bloody face of Fire French leered at him and he smashed at it with
his gun barrel and French went backward. A bullet seared his neck and
the powder burned his chin, but he whirled and tried to shoot Curlew,
but a big miner fell into him, knocking him outside the door.

The lamps went out and the fight continued in the dark. French and
Curlew were screaming orders; trying to tell their men that part of the
quarry had escaped. A blaze sprang up from a smashed lamp, as Duke
staggered into the street, trying to fill his lungs with air and to
shake the haze from his brain.

He staggered over a huddled figure, which fired a gun, the bullet
missing him by a yard. Duke saw the man’s face and yanked him to his
feet. It was Mica Cates, sobbing, cursing.

Men were coming out of the Silver Bar, and they seemed to be still
fighting. An orange-colored flash pointed toward Duke and Mica, and a
bullet screamed off the rocks at their feet.

Duke grasped Mica by the arm and hurried him toward the rim of Sunshine
Alley. Both of them staggered, and Duke smiled grimly to think that it
was a case of the blind leading the blind.

“Not into the Alley!” wailed Mica. “They’ll find us too easy. The
tunnels, Steele! Climb the hill--past--Luck’s place.”

“You know this place better than I do, Mica,” agreed Duke, “so you lead
the way.”

Both men were reeling, dizzy from their injuries, but they climbed the
steep trails up the cliffs, while behind them came the howling of the
mob, growing fainter all the time.

“God help Le Moyne!” panted Duke.

“They’ll kill him,” choked Mica, “but we couldn’t help him none. Thank
God, they’re not on our trail yet.”

Mica led the way into a tunnel, which was so dark that they were forced
to travel slowly, feeling their way along. It seemed to Duke that they
had gone miles, when Mica drew him at right angles and into another
tunnel, which sloped sharply upward.

“Goin’ into the Lady Slipper,” panted Mica. “They won’t look for us in
there, and if they don’t guard the bottom we can go down on ropes to the
trails below.”

Then the tunnel floor leveled out, and Duke knew that they were on the
Lady Slipper level. Suddenly he stumbled and sprawled against the side
of the drift. Mica Cates was swearing and floundering around.

“Got a match?” wheezed Mica. Duke found one and scratched it on the
wall. Lying in the center of the tunnel was the crumpled body of Louie
Yen, and the match-light flickered on the long-bladed knife beside him.

“Black got him!” croaked Mica, steadying himself with both hands, while
he peered down at Louie Yen. “Look out for Black.”

They stumbled on, going more cautiously now. The tunnel grew lighter
now, as though they were approaching daylight. Then it widened into a
big stope. To the left was the mouth of a tunnel, like the bore of a
giant cannon, and silhouetted against the moonlight, crawling toward the
opening, was a huge, animal-like figure.

As they stopped they could hear it whimpering, like an animal that had
been whipped severely.

“My God, it’s Black!” croaked Mica hoarsely.

The figure had reached the edge, and now it seemed to grasp a rope,
swing over the rim and disappear.

Duke started for the opening, but Mica grasped him by the arm. “Luck
must be here, Steele! To hell with Black!”

They turned and staggered back through the stope, where they found Luck
Sleed, bound with ropes and lying against a pile of broken rock. Her
face was like a white mask in the dim light, and she did not speak while
Duke cut the ropes from her.

Lying beside her was a big, white sombrero, with Mexican silver
trimmings. Duke picked it up and put it on his head. Luck was watching
him closely and now she tried to get to her feet, but she had been bound
for so long that her arms and legs were paralyzed. Duke started to pick
her up, but she stopped him.

“Don’t touch me,” she begged him. “Why did you do this to me? Why, I
thought I could trust you.”

“Hol’ on, Luck,” wailed Mica. “Me and Louie thought the same thing, but
Steele never done it. Don’t yuh remember that he was fightin’ Black when
they grabbed you?”

“Someone hit my head,” said Luck painfully. “I don’t remember anything
after that until I woke up here. That hat was there on the rocks. Black
laughed at me.”

“Well, Steele never harmed yuh, Luck. He had Louie Yen follow Black so
as to find yuh.”

“They fought,” said Luck in a flat voice. “It seemed like hours. I
couldn’t see all of it. There was only one shot fired, and I think Black
lost his gun. Did Louie get killed, Mica?”

“Yeah, I guess so, Luck,” sadly. “There’s been hell raised in Calico
tonight, but it’s too long to explain it to yuh now. Me and Steele got
away from ’em. I dunno what we’re goin’ to do now.”

“We’re goin’ to take Miss Luck back to her home,” said Duke, “and we’re
goin’ to see what we’ll see, Mica. Anyway, we just wanted to find her,
didn’t we? What matters after that, old pardner?”

“Don’t say that,” begged Luck. “I’m sorry I thought that you----”

“Thassall right, Luck. We’ll get yuh home.”

“But I don’t want you to--oh, I don’t know what to say. I’ve tried to
think that you would do this, but I couldn’t convince myself. Don’t you
believe me, Duke Steele?”

“Yes, I do, Luck. Mebbe you’ll have to trust me a lot for a while now.
If Calico ain’t right, it’s the desert for all of us, little girl. So
yuh see you’ve got to trust me a lot.”

“All right, Duke Steele.”

“Can yuh walk, Luck?” asked Mica.

“Not very fast, but I--I guess I can walk a little.”

Walking was a painful experience, after being bound tightly for so long,
but Luck was game.

Back into the sloping tunnel they went, feeling their way along,
expecting momentarily to find the body of Louie Yen, but it was not
there.

“Where’d he go?” complained Mica. “I ask yuh, where did he go, Steele?”

“Mebbe he wasn’t dead,” suggested Duke. “Chinamen have as many lives as
a cat.”

They came out on the ledge at the mouth of the tunnel. Below them lay
the town; dark save for the lights at the front of the Silver Bar. They
could hear muffled cheers, yells; exultation rather than anger. There
was no sign of pursuit.

Mica led the way down to Luck’s cabin, but she would not go in.

“I’m going with you,” she declared firmly. “That Silver Bar belongs to
me and I’m going down there.”

And without a word of further protest, Duke led the way down the street.
There was no one in sight, but the Silver Bar was a roar of voices, the
cheering of drunken men.

Straight in through the mass of humanity they went, until they reached
the fringe of a huge circle, where a queer sight met their gaze. Le
Moyne, only half-conscious, his face and head bruised and cut badly and
his clothes mere strips of rags, was slouched in a chair in the center
of the circle.

Around his big shoulders was tied a dirty Mexican serape of flaming red,
and in his bleeding hand had been thrust a broken whiskey bottle. Fire
French, bruised and battered, was assisting Curlew in arranging this
mockery, while the crowd cheered wildly.

“The king of Mojave!” yelped the crowd. “Long live the king!”

The place was a bedlam. Men were drinking toasts from broken-necked
bottles; men who were bleeding, ragged and sweat-grimed from the battle.

A man came shoving through the crowd from the rear, carrying something
in a blanket, which he placed on a table.

“For the king!” shrilled French. “A crown for the king of the desert!”

Grasping the piece of blanket in both hands, he up-ended it on top of Le
Moyne’s massive head and yanked the blanket away. It had contained a
number of great cacti, which dug their spines into Le Moyne’s head. He
swayed his head, like a wounded buffalo, but was too weak to shake them
off.

“The king is crowned!” yelled the crowd. “A crown for the king of Mojave
desert! Long live the king!”

French tore a bottle from the hands of a drunken miner and knocked the
top off against his boot-heel. Lifting his hand above Le Moyne’s head,
he started to pour out the liquor. Duke was watching him closely and saw
that French was staring toward the door. He dropped the bottle, which
caromed off Le Moyne’s head and fell to the floor.

Pete Black was coming slowly through the room, and the crowd stood aside
to let him to the center. He had met Louie Yen’s long knife in the
battle in the tunnel and the effect was awful to behold. He kept his
arms wrapped about his middle, as though fearful of what might happen if
he released them.

French and Curlew stared at him, as he stumbled up and almost fell into
Le Moyne’s lap.

“Look out!” croaked Black. “They--found--her. That--damn--Chink----”

Black swayed and tried to straighten up, as he turned toward the door,
and a whimper of fear came from his lips. Duke grasped Luck by the arm
and tried to draw her back. Louie Yen was coming through the room, his
old face set and almost white with suffering. In his right hand he
carried the long-bladed knife.

Black stared at him for a moment, whirled and tried to run, but fell
over the feet of Le Moyne, and sprawled on his face, his arms
wide-flung.

“You yellow snake!” French fairly shrieked as he whipped out his gun.
But Duke was looking for such a move and fired a fraction of a second
ahead of French, whose bullet tore into the floor. French groped blindly
for the table and fell on his knees.

Curlew did not make a move. He seemed paralyzed for a moment, and only
stared at Duke, as he walked up and took Curlew’s gun from his
unresisting hand. The crowd seemed shocked to inaction, and Duke turned
quickly on them.

“You fools! Do you want to wreck the town to satisfy the greed of some
tin-horn gamblers? Curlew is the last one of them left; the last of the
crooks that tried to plunder Calico. You all know Luck Sleed. They
kidnapped her and hid her in the Lady Slipper, where we found her
tonight.

“Black and his gang have been high-grading on her, while French and his
gang have stolen everything from the Silver Bar. If you are men, if you
have any decency about you at all, tomorrow will not see one of Black’s
men, nor Slim Curlew, in Calico town.”

Swiftly the temper of the crowd changed. Duke’s words were words that
they understood. Men were dodging out of the door, as a group of drunken
miners grasped the unlucky Curlew and hurled him out of the place.

Duke stepped over and removed the cactus from the head of Le Moyne. He
looked at Duke, but there was only a glimmer of intelligence in his
eyes. He had been mortally wounded during the fight, and the mockery he
had undergone meant nothing to him now.

“Le Moyne, do yuh know me?” asked Duke.

“Steele? Yes, I know--you. It was a--good--fight.”

“I brought the girl, Le Moyne. You remember the girl I told you
about--Luck Sleed.”

“Yes--Steele. Why don’t somebody light the lamps?”

“Listen, Le Moyne,” Duke was talking swiftly against time, “you said
she’d get what belonged to her.” Le Moyne seemed to rouse up and his
eyes were a little clearer. Several of the miners were standing close,
listening, and Le Moyne spoke to them.

“Come in--closer--and--listen. No--time--to--write.” Le Moyne licked
his bloody lips and drew a deep breath. “Everything I’ve got
belongs to--Duke--Steele. Do you hear--that? Everything. I will
it--to--him--and--I--want--you--to--witness.”

“But, Le Moyne, I don’t want it for myself,” explained Duke. “I want it
for Luck Sleed.”

“You’re a--man--can--hold--it,” mumbled Le Moyne thickly. “I--I think
you’ll--share--things--together--now. Pay back what you can--Steele.
No--lights here----”

“The passing of a king,” said Duke softly. “I hope he won’t be
misjudged.”

“What did he mean?” whispered Luck. “He said that we would share things
together, Duke.”

Louie Yen had been hanging onto the back of a chair and now he grinned
softly, as he said, “Yo’ takum, li’l gi’l. Yo’ need stlong man--Calico
need stlong man, yo’ sabe?”

Duke held out his hand to her, and together they went out into the
desert night, while behind them huddled the dead figure of a man who
aspired to a desert crown, and gazed with unseeing eyes as a crippled
miner clasped hands with a crippled and very old Chinaman, and limped
out of the door after them.


[Transcriber’s note: This story appeared in the January 25, 1923 issue
of _Short Stories_ magazine.]
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 77862 ***