"We"ve got to take charge of the Shooting Star. Of course, if we _do_ happen to run across----"
"I knew that would get a rise out of you!" laughed the Kid. "Catch Bud duckin" any excitement! Why, even Billee here wants to trail the smugglers--don"t you, Billee?"
"Never you mind!" came back the old rancher. "Want another race?"
""At-ta-boy, Billee!" Nort yelled. "Guess that"ll hold him! You didn"t know Billee Dobb was a champion racer, did you?" Nort said to Hawkins.
"I didn"t, no," responded the deputy with a smile. "But I believe it.
Takes old birds like us to show these youngsters up, eh, Billee?"
"Sure does!"
"Well, here we are," declared the Kid, as they came in sight of the water hole. "Right down there is where I saw the c.h.i.n.k on his hands and knees. Hey, take it easy there!" This to his pony, who strained toward the water. "I know you"re thirsty, but so are the others.
Easy--easy!" The Kid dismounted and led the panting horse toward the water. Leaning over he filled his hat, and held it to the mouth of his pony. "Start in on that. Slow! Or you don"t get any. "At-ta-boy.
Here"s another hatful for you. Feel as though you can control yourself now? All right--go to it!" By this time the intelligent animal got the idea, and drank in small mouthfuls. The other ponies, restrained by their masters from drinking too fast, did the same.
"So it was here that you saw the c.h.i.n.k, eh!" asked Joe Hawkins.
"Yep--right in this spot. He was leanin" over here by this little bush, lookin" for--" the Kid stopped suddenly and picked up something from the ground. It was a folded paper. The Kid looked it over swiftly.
"Lookin" for--_this_!" he exclaimed, holding it out.
"What is it?"
"Let"s have a look!"
The deputy walked over to the Kid.
"Mind if I see it?" he said quietly.
Without a word the Kid handed it over. He recognized the fact that it was the deputy"s right to demand it.
"That"s what the c.h.i.n.k was looking for," Hawkins declared after a moment. "See here! This paper----"
"Bang! Bang!"
"Duck!" cried the Kid. His hand reached for his gun as he hit the ground.
"Bang!"
Billee"s hat went sailing from his head.
"He means business!" d.i.c.k yelled. "Down, everybody!"
CHAPTER V
ARRIVAL AT THE RANCH
Another report rang out, and a bullet went singing overhead. By this time guns were out ready for action. From behind a small knoll, about one hundred and fifty yards away, hazy smoke could be seen arising.
"d.i.c.k, you stay here and keep me covered," said the Kid in a low voice.
The boys were all hugging the ground in the shelter of the brush. "I"m goin" to sneak around an" see if I can"t connect with the onery skunk that"s doin" the shootin"."
"Take it easy, Kid," d.i.c.k cautioned. "You can"t tell how many men there are over there."
"Right! Now you pa.s.s the word to the others to keep that hill peppered with lead. As soon as you see a sign of life, let ride. If you can keep whoever"s doin" all this out of sight, I"ll have a chance. So long!"
Yellin" Kid had started. With a simple "so long" he was off on a mission which might--and very likely would--end in his death. Men who spend their lives on the prairies have no time for heroics. They do their job--and say nothing.
Slowly the Kid crept forward. The hidden gunman seemed to be withholding his fire. In the brush by the water hole lay the five watching men--Billee Dobb and Joe Hawkins with long-barreled Colts ready for action, d.i.c.k, Nort and Bud squinting along the barrels of their shorter guns. Closer, closer, the Kid crawled. Seventy-five yards! Seventy! Now, Kid--now----
"Well, by the ghost of my aunt Lizzie"s cat!"
The Kid was standing upright, his mouth open, his gun hanging loosely by his side.
Not a soul was in sight!
A quick look about verified this. The country beyond the knoll was perfectly flat, and for over five hundred yards was bare of even the smallest bush. Whoever the mysterious shooter was, he had, apparently, vanished into thin air.
"Hey, you guys, come over here!" yelled the Kid. "We been blazed at by a ghost!"
One by one the men by the water hole got to their feet.
d.i.c.k was the first to reach the Kid"s side.
"He"s right, boys!" called back d.i.c.k, as he saw the empty s.p.a.ce behind the little hill. "n.o.body here. But let"s have a look at the ground.
We can tell if it"s been disturbed, anyway."
A careful search revealed not only the traces of someone having lain down on the loose earth, but also two empty sh.e.l.ls.
"That makes me feel a little better!" cried the Kid as he saw this. "I don"t hanker to be shot at by someone I can"t see. Now the thing to do is to find out what happened to our late playmate."
"He"s gone, ain"t he?" asked Billee Dobb incredulously, as he came shuffling along. Off his horse Billee was a bit awkward.
"You don"t say! Well, now, I never noticed that! Say, Billee, you a de-tect-a-tive by any chance?"
"Go on, laugh, Kid! You spent enough time sneakin" up on a whole lot of nothin", didn"t ye?"
"What do you think about this, Mr. Hawkins?" Bud asked of the deputy, who was looking around quietly.
"Not much, youngster, not much! Seems mighty funny to me. Doesn"t hardly appear likely that a man could get away in this flat country without us seeing him. But that"s what happened all right. Never knew a cowpuncher to have that much sneakin" ability in him."
"Maybe it wasn"t a cowboy," Nort suggested. "Maybe it was a--c.h.i.n.k."
"Never knew a c.h.i.n.k to use a forty-four in my life," the Kid declared.
"These here sh.e.l.ls come from a gun big enough to knock a Chinee clean off his slippers. Nope, this here job was done by a puncher--or--" and he stopped a moment--"or a Greaser."