Christian’s Scheme
WHEN Brender opened his eyes again, he was in a lamplit room, where the air was very warm. And a voice was drawling:
“Put in some more coffee. I want a hot shot. I’m sleepy, the way we been riding!”
Brender closed his eyes again. The pain that shot through his head with every pulse of his blood made him squint. The voice was familiar. He had heard it somewhere, and many times.
“That coffee’s going to be like lye,” said another voice.
It was “Buck.” It was he of the prominent teeth and the smile that was continually enforced by their projection. Brender forgot his pain, and looking wildly around him, he discovered that he was stretched on the kitchen floor. Its surface had been newly scrubbed, and was still dark with moisture in places. There were worn spots ground deep in the tiling near the stove and by the sink. Two men sat at the table. Another was at the stove, and as the latter turned, Brender recognized “Stew.”
That fleshy forehead and brutal face made Brender’s heart sink. Only on the most savage missions did Christian use Stew. Where a death was wanted, that gun artist was employed, but not in lesser things.
And his presence here meant, with that of Buck, that Christian’s men had successfully followed the trail — in the moonlight! Or had they merely guessed at the destination of the fugitive?
He groaned involuntarily.
“Hullo!” said the voice of Buck.
And the tall, cranelike form leaned from a chair.
“He’s come to,” said Buck. “Here he is, chief!”
The chief?
Yes, there was Christian with that pale, lean, handsome face and the hair worn long, like an artist’s. There was the half-thoughtful look of the artist about all his features, too, and the same sensitive mouth, the same slight stiffness of the upper lip. When he spoke, his nostrils were continually pinching in, or flaring a little. The whole face became fluid and expressive, from the mouth to the supple eyebrows, and the wrathful or quizzical brow. Every emotion could be registered there, or else every show of emotion could be banished from his face.
Barry Christian stood up and made a movement with his hand.
“Put him on the table,” he said.
Buck and Stew lifted the trussed body of Brender and sat him on the edge of the table, so that his eyes were level with those of Christian, who passed delicately sensitive fingers over the head of his captive and drew in a deprecatory breath.
“Too hard, Buck,” he said. “You have no sense of touch. Much too hard. A little farther back — here, you see — and that blow would have smashed the skull like a shell. A very hard blow! Much too hard.”
“Sorry,” said Buck gloomily. And his big, pale eyes looked at Brender with deathless venom.
Another voice said: “Well, well, well, and here you are, Rap! Here you are, my poor, misguided lad! Ha, ha, ha! Poor Rap! You see that I was right, Barry?”
That was Doc Shore, brushing dust from his divided beard with the tips of his fingers and peering down at the captive out of his pink-rimmed eyes.
“You’re always right, Doc,” said Barry Christian.
“It’s worth the ride out here, to be in at the death — and to know that I was right when I guessed that he would come to Higgins’s place. Oh, Barry, I know the heart of a young man. My body is old, perhaps, but my heart is still young.”
He laughed again, and then waved his hand.
“So long, Rap,” he said. “I’ll be seeing you later.”
And he walked out of sight.
“How are you, Rap?” asked Christian tenderly. “Are you in much pain?”
Hope shot up in the breast of Brender. That gentle voice might mean nothing. The hypocrisy of Christian was a bottomless pit. And yet who could read his mind beforehand? He might choose to regard this whole affair as a mere explosion of boyish enthusiasm and make light of the escapade.
“I’m a bit dizzy,” said Brender. “That’s all. There’s not much pain.”
“Good!” said Christian. “I’m glad of that. I wouldn’t want you to be out of your head with pain, because I have to talk to you a little, my boy.”
He added: “Here, Stew. Give Rap a swallow of coffee. Coffee is great stuff to clear the head, eh?”
“I’d rather give him a swaller of boiled lead,” said Stew.
“Hush, Stew!” said Christian. “Boiling lead?”
He laid his hand over his breast, the delicately tapered fingers moving slowly.
“Boiling lead! You’re a rough fellow, Stew,” said the chief.
“Rough?” said Stew. “I’d like to use a rasp on him and rub him down to the bone, I would. You dirty snake!” he added to Brender, as he brought the coffee cup.
“Be quiet, Stew,” said the gentle voice of Christian. And he took the cup and put it to the eager lips of Brender, saying: “A young chap like Rap is sure to boil over, now and then. Too much enthusiasm. Too much spirit. A little too mercurial. But on the other hand, think of the many good turns he’s done for us all. There’s hardly been a more valuable man for all of us, than Rap has been since he joined our little company.”
“Are you going to talk like that about him?” asked Stew, thrusting out his bulldog face.
“And why not?” said Christian. “Why shouldn’t I talk about him like this?”
There was just the slightest elevation of his head, the slightest change and hardening of his voice, but it was enough to make Stew wince back half a step and hold his tongue.
If the men of Christian knew nothing else, they knew how to read the face of their master carefully and tell when trouble was in the air. For this soft-spoken devil had struck men dead with a smile still on his lips and then wiped the blood from his hands and carried on from that point in his sentence where he had been interrupted.
“There!” said Christian soothingly. “There, Rap. Isn’t that better, now that you have a little hot coffee under the belt?”
“A lot better. Thanks!” said Brender.
Lifting his eyes, he looked earnestly into the face of the chief. An unfathomably angelic smile answered him, a softening of the eyes, a tenderness about the mouth. There was something fatherly and protective in the whole semblance of the man.
If only he could trust to that expression, all was well! All that had happened was as nothing!
“I’m glad you feel better,” said Christian. “Are you well enough to talk to me a little, Rap?”
“Yes,” said Brender. “All you want. I wanted to tell you, too, about Silvertip and the restaurant, back there in Copper Creek.”
“Ah, I understand, I understand!” said the outlaw chief. “What? A young lad — clean-cut young one. Murder! He thought that as he walked in, didn’t you, Rap? And murder of whom? Why, of a famous man — of the great Silver, himself. And a fine-looking fellow Silver is, with an eye that men won’t forget. A man of character, a man of sense and decency. Isn’t that the look of him, Rap?”
“It is,” said Rap. His enthusiasm swept up and controlled him. “He saw what was coming to him, chief. He saw what was coming, and he got ready to take it, like a man. If you’d been there, you would have called the deal off. There was no yellow in Silvertip. He just turned in his chair and looked around him. He saw there were four of us. He saw we were planted on him. But he didn’t buckle under. And all at once I couldn’t go ahead with the thing.”
“Of course you couldn’t,” murmured Christian. “My dear boy, of course you couldn’t. It seemed rotten and low, didn’t it?”
“Yes, it did,” agreed Brender.
“And since it seemed rotten and low, of course you couldn’t go ahead with it. To have tackled him alone, now — that would have been better for you. You wouldn’t have minded that so much, of course. It would have seemed more gentlemanly. A duel, not a massacre.”
“A duel and a massacre,” said Brender with a wry smile. “I wouldn’t have a chance in front of him. Nobody would. He’s fast as lightning, and he can see in the dark, pretty near.”
“Nobody would have a chance with him?” murmured Christian, lifting those mobile brows of his in an expression of almost childish wonder. He chose to ignore his former contests with Silver, keeping within his own breast the hatred and admiration he felt for him. Those of his men who knew of the past dared not open their lips. Almost by sheer force of his determination, Christian had erased from men’s minds the defeats of the past. “Nobody?” repeated Barry Christian.
“Except you,” said Brender hastily, remembering certain things that he had seen, and many others that he had heard about.
“Ah, don’t flatter me, Rap,” said Christian gently. “Whatever you do, don’t flatter me. Flattery is the worst mental poison in this world. The worst of all. The greatest men have gone down before the flattery of their friends, when the swords and the guns of their enemies couldn’t destroy them! No, no, flattery is the worst of all! You won’t flatter me, Rap, will you?”
Brender shook his head.
“Are you laughing at me, chief?” he asked. “You know that nobody in the world can stand up to you.”
“Nobody? Ah, ah, the world is larger than we are,” said the criminal. “I should never pretend that nobody can stand up against me. All I know is that I keep myself in practice, patiently, every day, working away my hours.” He sighed. “A little natural talent, and constant preparation. That’s all it needs. You fellows are my equals, every one of you. Taking a little pains is all the difference between us. But now, Rap, to return to your friend Silvertip. Where did he hide out when he came to the Higgins place with you?”
“He didn’t come here,” said Brender.
“Ah, he didn’t come? He deserted you, Rap? Well, well, I should not have expected that of the great Silver. Not the sort of a fellow who would desert a friend when the friend is apt to get into trouble.”
“He didn’t run away from me,” said Brender. “But I knew that I’d be running into a lot of trouble, before long.”
“You knew it?” said the soft voice of the chief.
“I knew it. I knew that I couldn’t beat you, chief. I knew that you’d presently run me down. I thought there was no use putting Silver in the bag with me. And that when you caught me, there was no use in Silver being shot to pieces fighting for my hide. So I pulled out away from him, in the middle of the night, and came on by myself. He doesn’t know this part of the world very well, and he’ll never find me here.”
“Ah,” said Christian, “you guessed that we’d be a lot keener to get at you than to get at Silver, didn’t you?”
“Well, you’d call me a traitor. I knew that,” said Brender. “I knew that I’d get the red mark on my name.”
“He knew that,” said Christian to the others, without the slightest emphasis.
“Are you going to keep talking to him? Ain’t you going to let me get at him?” demanded Stew.
The leader silenced Stew with a gesture.
“We guessed that you’d come here,” said Christian. “I don’t know how. When I thought of your happy nature, Rap, and your jolly, carefree ways, I suddenly had a picture of you sitting in the cool of Higgins’s patio and drinking his liquor and taking your ease. So we came here and saw Higgins, who kindly took us up to your room. But you were not there. However, when we found your horse in the stable, we could guess that you had not actually left the place. So we waited. And first came the pretty girl, and then came our handsome Rap Brender.
“I’m sorry that Stew hit you so hard. I would have handled the job myself, but my hands were full, just then, managing the girl, and keeping her silent. Valiant little thing, Rap. She kept struggling, and fighting, and trying to free herself, and shout a warning to you. How her heart beat! How she moaned, deep in her throat. It was touching. I pitied her. I envied you, Rap, too. Lovely little thing. Delightful hands. Delicate hands!”
He smiled at Brender after a fashion that he had, tilting his head back, and half closing his eyes, and letting his lips part a little, slowly, until the white of his teeth flashed through. Brender had seen that smile on the face of the chief when he knew that death was in his heart.
“Where is she now?” asked Rap Brender. “Was she hurt? Was she harmed?”
“Look, Stew,” said the chief with a sort of tender amusement. “Rap is all of a tremble, afraid that the girl was hurt. No, no, she was as safe in my hands as a small bird in its nest. Just as safe, I give you my word. And then I just turned her over to her guardian. Ah, Rap, a bad business that, taking young girls away from their lawfully appointed guardians.”
“He’s not!” exclaimed Brender. “The fellow lied to you, chief. I swear that he lied! She ought to be a free citizen of our country. She’s American, and they’re going to take her south to Mexico, and make her do what they please, and crush the money out of her! She’s rich, and they want to get her money. It’s an outrage! If you stop them, she’ll reward you!”
“She’ll reward me? Well, well,” said the chief. “Perhaps she would, after all. Though I suppose that good actions should reward themselves. But she’s rich, is she? Ah, ah — rich and an orphan, and so brave, and so fierce to save Rap Brender from harm! It’s a touching case, and I think that I shall have to do something about it. I’m sure that I shall. I give you my word that you may rest assured, Rap — that I’ll do something about it. Just what, I don’t know — but certainly Mr. Murcio shall hear from me!”
“And this here skunk?” asked Stew.
Buck turned his pale, hungry eyes on Brender at the same moment.
“What would you have me do?” asked Barry Christian.
“I’d have you back out and leave him to me for a coupla hours,” said Stew. “These here walls are pretty thick. We wouldn’t disturb nobody very much while we was working on him.”
Buck swallowed, then he licked his dry lips and continued to run his eager eyes over and over the body of Brender.
“But would it be wise?” said Barry Christian. “You must remember that as long as we hold Rap in our hands, Silvertip is drawing closer and closer to us. He is searching for his vanished friend. He is combing the desert, on that matchless horse of his, like a hawk in the air, hunting, hunting, never at rest. Such a man as Silver, you know, will never give up, so long as sacred friendship is in his mind, so long as a sacred obligation remains to be discharged. No, he’ll continue hunting until he finds Rap Brender, and when he finds Rap, then, lads, we close our hands over the most interesting man in this entire world; we close our hands over Silver himself.”
He stood up suddenly. His thoughts for an instant struck through the profound mask of his hypocrisy like white fire through a storm cloud. And the keen, penetrating light shot from his eyes.
Stew and Buck looked at their chief, aghast.
“He had the world before him. He could wander where he pleased,” said Christian. “But he chose to interfere with me — and therefore, he is dead! He is a ghost already. He throws no shadow on the sand!”
The passion faded suddenly out of his eyes.
“To catch this priceless Silver,” said the chief, “would be more than our united talents might be able to accomplish, my friends. But now, on account of Mr. Brender, we don’t need to plan and scheme and wear out our horses pursuing him. We may simply wait here until the profound mind of Silver has solved the problem and located the man. We then pull the trigger, and the trap falls, and Silver is ours, taken like an eagle out of the sky.”
He dropped an affectionate hand on the shoulder of Stew.
“And after that happens, Stew,” he said, “after that happens, we may perhaps be able to do something about Rap Brender himself. Because I know what you have in mind, Stew, and I have such an affection for you that it would pain me to disappoint you.”
He smiled at Stew, at Buck, and, last of all, and most lingeringly and tenderly, on Rap Brender himself.
So that Rap, bowing his head suddenly, felt the ice of despair slipping like a bitter steel edge into his heart.