A LITTLE knot of men stood grouped about the big map on the court-house steps. The land that was to be auctioned off was divided into quarter sections of one hundred and sixty acres. They spoke among themselves, a conscious restraint in their manner. Under the cottonwoods on the court-house lawn, other men waited, tall, lanky, their faces seamed and tanned in the way of desert men. There was a twang to their speech not unlike what one hears in the mountains of Kentucky. It was natural, for these men, or their fathers before them, had come from Kentucky and Tennessee, a hard-fighting race of pioneers who had been breaking the wilderness for generations.
There was a holiday air about their plain clothes; the occasion was important enough to warrant that. From time to time, one or the other would glance at his watch.
Jim Montana, seated at his desk in his office on the second floor, turned from watching them to glance at the clock on the wall. It was only eleven-thirty; half an hour yet before the sale would begin.
The tension that so obviously rested on the men below found an echo in him. There was a set look about his strong mouth, the little laugh lines in the corners straight and uncompromising. His lean jaw, determined enough at any time, jutted out severely.
“No sign of trouble yet,” he mused. “Maybe I’m going to get away with this after all . . . It won’t take long.”
Wild Horse was a one-street town. The court-house stood at one end of it. From where he sat, Montana commanded a view of it. There were very few vacant places at the hitchracks in front of the stores and saloons. Saddled horses and rigs of one sort or another lined both sides of the streets. It was Saturday. That always brought people to town. But this was like the Fourth of July. Some men had brought their families with them—women and children to whom even such a place as Wild Horse held excitement and diversion.
Montana had grown up on a ranch; he could appreciate the interest with which three sun-browned boys were regarding the articles on display in the window of Charlie Brown’s hardware store.
“This thing to-day is going to mean a lot to them later on—school and better clothes,” he thought.
Across the street an Indian stalked out of the tiny frame shack that served Clay Quantrell as an office for his freight and express business. Montana recognized him. It was young Plenty Eagles. He was not a reservation Indian. Since the snow had gone off that spring, he had been teaming for Quantrell between Wild Horse and the Jordan River Country.
Quantrell came to the door a moment later and called to the Indian, but Plenty Eagles only walked faster. He was making directly for the entrance to the court-house, and it was easy to see that he was enraged over something.
“Looks like a bad day all around for our red brothers,” Jim thought aloud. He shook his head sadly. His sympathy was all with them. He toyed with the freshly stamped letter that lay on his desk. It contained his resignation. He knew forces would be brought to bear against him for what he was doing to-day that would make his dismissal certain. The resignation was just his way of beating those forces to the draw.
He did not regret the stand he was taking. It would make him enemies as well as friends. That seemed rather unimportant just now. “A man’s got to play his cards according to the way they’re dealt to him,” he thought.
Someone was clumping up the stairs. The door of his office stood open. A moment later, Plenty Eagles stamped in. Clay Quantrell was only a step behind him.
Plenty Eagles was tall for a Piute. He brought a great excitement into the room with him, his piercing black eyes smoking with rage.
Jim knew him well. He raised his hand and gave him the sign. “How, Cola!”
Plenty Eagles drew himself up stiffly. “No! Long time I am knowing you. When you work for Henry Stall, many times I am come to your camp. Always you spread the robe for me and call me brother. I am trusting, you. Aiee!” He pulled down the corners of his mouth with withering contempt. “Your tongue is crooked! It says one thing and means another!”
Montana looked to Quantrell for the answer to all this.
“Don’t pay any attention to him, Jim,” Quantrell said, trying to make light of the matter. “I tried to talk to him, but he wouldn’t listen. He thinks you are driving his people off the reservation.”
“My father old man; he not like leaving reservation,” Plenty Eagles exclaimed fiercely. “Squaw Valley good place, he say. Indians living there long time. Not go away. All the time be sad for these hills.”
Quantrell found a chair and sprawled all over it. “Did you ever hear anythin’ sillier?” he laughed again.
His derision rubbed Montana the wrong way. They were not the cronies Quantrell liked to pretend they were, although of late he had been spending a lot of time in Jim’s office.
“Nothing very funny about this to me,” Montana said coolly. “Plenty Eagles is right; it’s a damned nasty business yanking his people out of Squaw Valley. When they consented to go there they were led to believe the valley would be theirs forever. Now some fathead in Washington has discovered the Government can save a few dollars by packing them off to Fort Hall.” He turned to the Indian. “You bet it’s pretty tough, Plenty Eagles. You tell your father my heart bleeds for him. I love these hills, too.”
“Then why you make him go?”
“I not make him go,” Montana answered with great patience. “Letter comes; says Piutes go to Fort Hall; sell reservation. Men in Washington do this—not me.”
“Sure, Plenty Eagles! You got this all wrong,” Quantrell cut in, his face an emotionless mask even as he grinned, his teeth white against his swarthy skin. “Jim didn’t have anything to do with it. When the soldiers come up from Fort McDermitt next month to move your folks, they’ll go peaceful enough. They’ll have to go; ain’t nothing else for ’em to do. Better hitch up your team and pull out; you got a heavy load.”
Jim knew Plenty Eagles had not been listening to Quantrell. There was a puzzled look on the Indian’s face.
“You put up plenty sign about sell reservation,” said he. “I show him to Quantrell. He say, ‘Take down those signs; Montana not have sale.’ Me, I tear them up. Now you have sale anyhow.”
If Quantrell was surprised or annoyed by Plenty Eagles’ admission that he had destroyed the legal notices of the sale, he gave no sign of it.
“Did you tell him that, Clay?” Jim asked, pushing back his chair as though to get to his feet. Quantrell waved him down.
“Don’t be foolish!” he drawled. “He just got me wrong, that’s all. I—happen to know they can send you to prison for tearing up them things.” He lit a cigarette and blew a cloud of smoke in the Indian’s direction. “Plenty Eagles, I wouldn’t go around repeating what you just said. It might get you into trouble.”
The baffled look deepened in the Piute’s eyes. He sensed that there was a game here, but he couldn’t understand it. Prison? He understood that perfectly. His face remained immobile and stern, but his shoulders sagged impotently; he had been tricked before. Without another word he shuffled out of the office and went down the stairs.
Quantrell smoked his cigarette unconcernedly. He knew Montana was regarding him thoughtfully. An impudent smile parted his lips. “Don’t pretend you’re surprised,” he purred. “You knew the signs were down. You did your duty; you put’ em up. If they didn’t stay up, you should worry. It served your purpose as well as mine.”
“Yeah?” Montana’s blue eyes were cold and gray. “You’re pretty sure I’ve got a purpose, eh?”
“I hope to tell you I am!” Quantrell began to lose some of the nonchalance he liked to affect as Montana continued to regard him. “I got your play right off. You want to freeze old Slick-ear out of Squaw Valley.” Quantrell permitted himself another smile. “Feeling the same way about it, I began to sit up nights, figuring out ways to help you.”
“When I need help I usually know how to ask for it.” Jim’s tone was definitely hostile. “Why are you so interested ?”
“That’s a fair question,” Quantrell replied bluntly. “I’ll give you a fair answer. Half of my business has been freighting Government issues to the agency in Squaw Valley. That’s all over now. But if you can’t make a living one way, you got to do it another. God knows that ranch of mine will never put a dollar in my pocket as it stands. My only out is to buy in some of this reservation bottom land, so I’ll have hay and water and make it a going concern. I’m chucking the freighting business.”
“Oh . . .”
“I guess you know now why I don’t want Henry Stall poking his nose into Squaw Valley and gobbling up the whole damn works.” Quantrell hitched his chair nearer to the desk and leaned forward confidentially. “Seeing the conversation has taken this turn, Jim,” he ran on, “reminds me of something. Section number seven—just above the forks—is what I got my eye on. You can—fix things so I’ll get it, can’t you?”
The silence that followed grew oppressive. Quantrell began to fidget as Jim’s eyes burned into his.
“Clay—I ought to kick you out of here for that,” he said at last. “You talk as though you had something on me. If you have—shoot! I’m not fixing anything for anybody.”
“Of course not!” Quantrell knew he had over-stepped himself. “All I meant was—if you can give me a break, why—I’ll appreciate it.”
“Well, you want to say what you mean with me,” Montana flung back. He pulled himself erect and walked over to the window and gazed up and down the street. Plenty Eagles was pulling out of town with his twelve-mule team.
Only the droning of the flies, sailing in and out of the unscreened window, and the ticking of the clock on the wall broke the silence as Quantrell rolled another cigarette. As he moistened the paper with his tongue, he raised his eyes to flash a glance of hatred at Montana’s back. “I’ll square that some day,” he promised himself.
Jim’s eyes had strayed to the road that led into town from the southwest. Quantrell saw him stiffen. He failed to surmise the reason.
“Well, only a few minutes now and you can get started,” he drawled. “All the interested parties are present.”
“Yes—thanks to you!” Jim whipped out.
Quantrell caught the challenge in his voice. “What do you mean?” he demanded as Jim whirled on him.
“Judd Case was in here yesterday morning. Said you’d been talking to him.”
Quantrell flushed. “No use denying it,” he got out awkwardly. “Just razzing him a little. It was too late to do any harm.”
“I might have known it,” Montana ground out furiously. “You had to play the tin-horn, didn’t you?”
“Say, muchacho, I don’t intend to eat all the dust you kick up!” Quantrell towered above Montana as they faced each other, his mouth cruel and reckless.
“Take a look out the window,” Jim muttered.
A dozen men were riding into town. They were armed—alert and unfriendly. Quantrell let a grunt of dismay escape him.
“You know them?” Montana rasped unpleasantly.
“Reb Russell and the Bar S bunch from Furnace Creek!” The big fellow’s voice trailed away to a smothered whisper.
“Look the other way—beyond the tracks. See anything ?”
“My God!” was Quantrell’s answering exclamation.
“Yeah! Too late to do any harm, eh? You ought to grow up, Quantrell. This’ll be the old man himself and his South Fork outfit. They’re not here by accident.”
Downstairs the hum of conversation fell away to an excited whisper. The sober faces of the men who had been waiting about the court-house grew graver as they recognized Reb and his men. They drew together, silent and tight of lip. Suddenly the very air had become charged with a breathless tension.
Quantrell’s air of confidence had vanished when he turned away from the window, “It’s a show-down now,” he got out. “Are you going through with your play?”
“I haven’t any play left,” Montana answered stonily. “A tin-horn kicked my hand into the discard.”
Quantrell reared up defiantly, his face white with rage.
“Get going!” Montana warned. “When that crowd downstairs learns the right of this they’ll be looking for you with a rope!”