The Fifth Ace

Chapter 4

Leisurely, Thode approached the roulette-table and stood looking over the shoulder of a burly drill-shirted tool-dresser as the little ball spun in the whirling wheel and dropped into seventeen. The tool-dresser grunted with satisfaction and raked in the heap of silver pushed toward him by the croupier, but one or two of the watchers turned away. The play was evidently not yet high enough to hold their interest, and Thode was on the point of following when a hand clapped his arm.

Turning, he found a tall, lean figure beside him clad in immaculate white duck from top to toe, with a drooping gray mustache beneath a high, thin nose, keen, twinkling eyes and a ma.s.s of grizzled, waving hair. He might have been anywhere between forty-five and sixty, and in a flash his ident.i.ty was disclosed to the young engineer.

"Howdy!" The hand which had rested on his arm clasped his in a hearty grip. "Glad to see you here, Sir. My daughter told me to expect you."

"You"re Gentleman Geoff?" the younger man asked quickly, smiling in return. "My name is Thode. I met your daughter yesterday----"

"So she told me." The twinkle brightened in the genial eyes. "I"m glad of a chance to thank you for helping her with that poor little cuss, Jose. He"s a special favorite of hers. Were you thinking of sitting in right now, Mr. Thode?"

"Not just yet. I was having a look around----"

"Then come out where it"s cool, and have a man-sized drink."

His surprising host led the way to the patio where they found a little table close by the plashing fountain and a hovering mozo attended to their needs. When the servant had departed, Gentleman Geoff folded his arms on the table and leaned forward.

"You"re a newcomer, Mr. Thode, and down here we don"t ask a man where he came from or the nature of his business, as long as he attends to it strictly and doesn"t interfere with others. There is no objection to his playing a tight game providing he is on the level, but when he makes a crooked move, it"s time for the rest of us to take a hand. My Billie tells me you are an old acquaintance of this man Wiley and I am going to ask you one question straight, Sir. Do you know anything good of him?"

"Well," Thode temporized, "he"s rated a millionaire in New York and his father was one of the pioneer Pennsylvania oil men. He is a partner of Harrington Chase, and together they hold some of the best leases in this part of the country, I understand."

"They do. But I was speaking of the man himself." Gentleman Geoff"s eyes smiled a perfect understanding. "I was wondering if there could be some point in his favor that I"d overlooked."

"In that case, we"ve been mutually blind," said Thode, frankly. "I met him first out in Oklahoma two years ago, and I"ve run across him more than once since, and I don"t mind telling you candidly that each meeting has given me less pleasure. I didn"t expect to encounter him down here, and I guess Limasito is big enough to hold us both, but if he wants to see me after to-day he knows where to find me."

The older man nodded, slowly.

"I reckoned as much. He hasn"t been any favorite since he blew in here, to draw it mild, but he"s getting just a little bit too offensive for the good of the community. I know his breed, but I didn"t think even he would snap at my Billie"s heels. I would have looked you up at the hotel to-night to shake hands with you for what you did this afternoon, Mr. Thode, but Billie told me you intended to pay us a little visit."

"It was a pleasure," the other responded with sincerity. "It has been coming to Wiley for a long time. But your daughter had the situation well in hand. She is a remarkable young woman."

"She is an honest one, honest with herself and the world. There wasn"t much else I could teach her and it hasn"t been possible for her to have regular schooling and the influence of women. I"ve always reckoned fair play was about the biggest thing in life, and woman-like she"s gone further than my teachings and worked out an eye-for-an-eye creed of justice for herself that would shame a vigilance committee, but she"s wholesome and sound in mind and limb."

"I"ve learned a little of what they think of her in this town." Thode hesitated, and then went on earnestly. "I know the strict code of even the roughest mining camps up over the border, where good women are concerned, but I"ll own that it gave me a jolt to see how freely and fearlessly she goes about down here. You may think, Sir, that I"m exhibiting a lot of nerve, and it may be that I have a distorted picture in my mind of the life in this part of the country for a young girl like your daughter, but is she safe with all these low-caste half-breeds about?"

"As safe as in a convent." Gentleman Geoff"s eyes had narrowed. "I appreciate your interest, Mr. Thode, but let me remind you that it was a man from the States, a New York swell, who molested her this afternoon. There isn"t a low-caste Mex" who would take a chance, for he"d know that every gun from here to the Sierra Madre would be c.o.c.ked for him, and even the hills couldn"t give him a hiding-place! But as to Wiley. I had a reason apart from his little attentions to Billie, for asking about him. Whatever lies between you two is your own game, but I know you better than you think, Mr. Thode. Your chief, Perry Larkin, told me he was sending you down, and what manner of hombre you were. If Larkin can trust you, I"m going to take a chance. I thought I had Wiley"s number, but I learned something to-day, aside from that little fracas, that makes me doubt I"ve given him credit for his limit of crookedness. Mr. Thode, do you figure that Starr Wiley is enough of a man to be a very big rascal?"

Thode hesitated again.

"I think," he began at last, "that it would depend wholly on the size of the stakes. He"s a coward when it comes to a show-down, but money and place and power are his G.o.ds. If it was a tremendous piece of villainy with a big incentive he mightn"t have the courage to see it through himself, but he is quite capable of aiding and abetting it, or hiring others to do it for him."

Gentleman Geoff"s fists clenched and he drew a deep breath.

"That"s it!" he cried. "You"ve struck it, Mr. Thode! Unless I"m mistaken, he"s dealing the biggest, crookedest hand of his life right now, but we"ll get him, Sir. We"ll show him what fair play is below the border--"

He broke off and for a minute the two men sat in silence, straining their ears.

Above the click of gla.s.ses and sound of many voices in the gambling-rooms had come the sharp, staccato clatter of a horse"s hoofs upon the hard-packed road. It was not unusual in a land where hooch was cheap and stimulating and every drunken roysterer celebrated in the saddle, but there was an ominous, tragic suggestion in the irregularity of the hoof-beats as of an exhausted, failing beast urged on by grim and vital need.

The young engineer leaped to his feet as the clatter ceased in a harsh sc.r.a.ping thud, and with Gentleman Geoff beside him, he crossed the patio and re-entered the gambling-room. The voices had hushed as if by magic, and every motionless figure was turned toward the entrance door.

It was flung open and a man staggered blindly over the sill, reeling and clutching at his breast with both gnarled, sinewy hands.

"El Negrito!" his voice rose in a smothered sob. "He"s. .h.i.t the trail and coming fast. Look out for your----"

The stranger choked, caught at his throat and crumpled slowly to the floor, a thin scarlet stream pouring from his lips. The silence held for one tense moment and then pandemonium broke loose.

"A raid! A raid!"

Hoa.r.s.e cries filled the room and a mad stampede ensued, but somehow through the rampant throng, Kearn Thode found himself before that fallen figure. Gentleman Geoff was still at his side, but another had been quicker than they. Soft hands raised the dying man"s head and Billie knelt beside him, her pallor intensified but her eyes steady and calm.

"Sam! can you speak to me? Where are the babies, and Mamie?"

"Gone!" The breath whistled through the tortured lips.

"Macheted--thank G.o.d, I saw them die. Tell Geoff--save you----"

The whisper died in a rattle and the head slumped inert against her knee.

"It"s over, Billie. Get on down to the cellar, quick----" Gentleman Geoff"s tones rang with command, but the girl shook her head.

"Where the liquor is stored?" she smiled. "Alvarez"s men won"t leave a cask unturned. No, Dad, I"d rather take a chance with you, here. If it comes to a showdown, they won"t get me."

She made a significant gesture, and the lethargy of consternation fell from Thode as he saw for the second time that day the glint of her revolver.

"Good G.o.d!" he exclaimed. "Isn"t there something to be done? We"re only a handful! Are we going to wait here for that black devil to come and slaughter us?"

"No, Son," Gentleman Geoff drawled. "We"re going to put up the stiffest fight we know how, but there"s no help nearer than the barracks at the oil refinery ten miles north, and El Negrito is on the way."

As if in corroboration of his words a new sound broke all at once upon their ears, distant at first but drawing rapidly close, a fusillade of shots, and the pounding of a mult.i.tude of hoofs.

Gentleman Geoff drew one slim hand across his reeking forehead.

"It"s come. Boys! Steady now, to the finish!"

"Look here, Sir! I"m going to try for it." Thode caught his host by the arm. "I can slip out before they have the house surrounded and find a horse somewhere. If they down me, one man more or less here won"t make any difference, and it"s a chance!"

"Look!" Gentleman Geoff waved the young engineer to a narrow window beside the entrance door.

Down the straight level expanse of the Calle Rivera clattered an unending stream of hors.e.m.e.n, their accoutrements jingling a sinister diapason as they poured helter-skelter across the plaza in the waning moonlight. Tatterdemalion as they were, the ragged army were well-organized as Thode saw at a glance; no haphazard, leaderless crew was this, for at their head rode a diminutive, jockey-like figure, his face glistening and ebony in the eerie radiance, his teeth flashing white as he turned in the saddle. The Little n.i.g.g.e.r had come!

His company halted in an irregular line against the eastern end of the plaza, flung themselves from their horses and came on in a rushing, yelling horde. A weak scattered volley rattled from the dwellings about the square, but the raiders made unswervingly for what was obviously their main objective, the Blue Chip, where most of the male population, unlimited alcohol and a fabulous ransom in gold were theirs for the taking.

They had reached the center of the Calle, when Gentleman Geoff barked a brief command and a withering blast of shots rang forth from the besieged garrison. The advancing line crumpled, wavered, then at a cat-like yowl from its dusky leader, closed in and came forward with an answering roar.

Kearn Thode sprang from his point of vantage and faced the other man once more with undiminished determination in his eyes.

"I"ve got to get to the barracks--it means death to us all if I stay here! Isn"t there a door on the other side of the house somewhere back of the patio?"

"Yes. It opens on a little alley that leads to the plaza." It was the girl"s eager voice which replied.

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