It was me that took him!"
No direct answer could Arizona find to this true statement, and, as always when a man is at a loss for words, his temper rose, and his fists clenched. For the first time he looked at Sandersen with an eye of savage calculation. He had come to hope of a tidy little fortune. He had found it s.n.a.t.c.hed out of his hand, and, as he measured Sandersen, his heart rose. Twenty-five-hundred dollars would fairly well equip him in life. The anger faded out of his eyes, and in its place came the cold gleam of the man who thinks and calculates. All at once he began to smile, a mirthless smile that was of the lips only.
"Maybe you"re right, Sandersen, but I"m thinking you"d have to prove that you took Cold Feet."
"Prove it?"
"Sure! The boys wouldn"t be apt to believe that sleepy Sandersen woke up and took Cold Feet alive."
Instantly the gorge of Sandersen rose, and he began to see red.
"Are you out to find trouble, Fatty?"
The adjective found no comfortable lodging place in the mind of Arizona.
"Me? Sure I ain"t. I"m just stating facts the way I know "em."
"Well, the facts you know ain"t worth a d.a.m.n."
"No?"
It was growing clearer and clearer to the fat man that between him and twenty-five-hundred dollars there stood only the unamiable figure of the long, lean cowpuncher. He steadied his eye till a fixed glitter came in it. He hated lean men by instinct and distrusted them.
"Sure they ain"t. How you going to get around the fact that I did take Cold Feet?"
"Well, Sandersen, you see that they"s twenty-five-hundred dollars hanging on the head of this Cold Feet?"
"Certainly! And I see ten ways of spending just that amount."
"So do I," said Arizona.
"You do?"
"Partner, you"ve heard me talk!"
"Arizona, you"re talking mighty queer. What d"ye mean?"
"Now, suppose it was me that brought in Cold Feet, who"d get the money?"
"Why, you that brought him in?"
"Yep, me. And suppose I brought him in with two murders charged to him instead of one."
"I don"t foller you. What"s the second murder, Fatty?"
"You!"
Sandersen blinked and gave back a little. Plainly he was beginning to fear that the reason of Arizona was unbalanced.
He shook his head.
"I"ll show you how it"ll be charged to Cold Feet," said the fat man.
Taking the cartridge belt of Jig he shook the revolver out of the holster and pumped a shot into the ground. The sharp crack of the explosion roused no echo for a perceptible s.p.a.ce. Then it struck back at them from a solid wall of rock, almost as loud as it had been in fact. Off among the hills the echo was repeated to a faint whisper.
Arizona dropped the revolver carelessly on the ground.
"Fatty, you"ve gone nutty," said Sandersen.
"I"ll tell you a yarn," said Arizona.
Sandersen looked past him to the east. The light was growing rapidly about the mountains. In another moment or so that sunrise which he had been looking forward to with such solemn dread, would occur. He was safe, of course, and still that sense of impending danger would not leave him. He noted Jig, erect, very pale, watching them with intense and frightened interest.
"Here"s the story," went on the fat man. "I come out of Sour Creek hunting for Cold Feet. I came straight to this here mountain. Halfway up the side I hear a shot. I hurry along and soft-foot on to this shoulder. I see Cold Feet standing, over the dead body of Sandersen.
Then I stick up Cold Feet and take him back to Sour Creek and get the reward. Won"t that be two murders on his head?"
The thin Swede rubbed his chin. "For a grown man, Fatty, you"re doing a lot of supposing."
"I"m going to turn it into fact," said Arizona.
"How?"
"With a chunk of lead! Pull your gun, you lanky fool!"
It seemed to Jig, watching with terrible interest, that Sandersen stared not at Arizona, as he went for his gun, but beyond the stubby cowpuncher--far behind and into the east, where the dawn was growing brighter, losing its color, as sunrises do, just before the rising of the sun. His long arm jerked back, the revolver whipped into his hand, and he stiffened his forearm for the shot.
All that Jig saw, with eyes sharpened, so that each movement seemed to be taking whole seconds, was a sneering Arizona, waiting till the last second. When he moved, however, it was with an almost leisurely flip of the wrist. The heavy Colt was conjured into his hand. With graceful ease the big weapon slipped out and exploded before Sandersen"s forefinger had curled around the trigger.
Out of the hand of the Swede slipped the gun and clanged unheeded on the ground at his feet. She saw a patch of red spring up on his breast, while he lurched forward with long, stiff strides, threw up his hands to the east, and pitched on his face. She turned from the dead thing at her feet.
The white rim of the sun had just slid over the top of a mountain.
28
She dropped to her knees, and with a sudden, hysterical strength she was able to turn him on his back. He was dead. The first glimpse of his face told her that. She looked up into the eyes of the murderer.
Arizona was methodically cleaning his gun. His color had not changed.
There was a singular placidity about all his movements.
"I just hurried up what was coming to him," said Arizona coolly, as he finished reloading his Colt. "Sinclair was after him, and that meant he was done for."
Oddly enough, she found that she was neither very much afraid of the fat man, nor did she loathe him for his crime. He seemed outside of the jurisdiction of the laws which govern most men.
"You said Sinclair is in jail."
"Sure, and he is. But they don"t make jails strong enough in these parts to hold Sinclair. He"d have come out and landed Sandersen, just as he"s going to come out and land Cartwright. What has he got agin"