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Sudden Takes The Trail

Oliver Strange

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Chapter I

"MURDERER!" The man on the big horse spoke the word aloud, and never had the sound of it seemed so sinister, for he was applying it to himself. Then, as had happened many times in the past few days, his moody gaze swept over the vast expanse of semi-desert he was crossing. High overhead, an eagle, winging its unhurried way against the pale blue sky, was the only visible evidence of other living creatures.

"Reckon we've razzle-dazzled 'em, of hoss," the rider went on.

The black head of the animal came round to nuzzle its master's knee. He bent and stroked the silken nostrils.

"Fella can get away from his own kind but not from his-self," he mused. "Mebbe I'd oughta stayed an' took my chances, but hell ! there warn't no chances." His mind slipped back to that fatal evening only a week before, recalling the scene and the swift sequence of events which had forced him to flee for his life.

Absently he searched a vest pocket for cigarette papers and discovered a metal star which, in the bright sunlight, seemed to wink at him maliciously.

"Runnin' off with the marshal's badge makes me a thief too," he said with a mirthless smile. "Shucks, they can buy another with the pay I didn't collect." He had been peace-officer of Pinetown for some months, and his habit of doing thoroughly any task he undertook speedily made him unpopular with the unruly--and larger--section of the community. But if they hated, they also feared this hard-faced stranger, who bore a name which bred hesitancy in the boldest when it came to defying him. For this was Sudden, cowpuncher, gunman, and outlaw, whose speed on the draw and accuracy of aim with a six-shooter had earned for him an unenviable reputation in the South-West. Because of it, he had been appointed marshal, for only such men could maintain any semblance of decency and order in a land where every man carried his own life in the holster slung at his hip.

"Masters is in trouble at Miguel's. Hurry." He heard again the whispered message which a white-faced boy had crept into the saloon to bring, sent by a man whose face the messenger could not see. Sudden had not hesitated. What was Dave doing in Miguel's--a squalid hovel owned by a Mexican, where the vileness of the liquor was equalled only by the scum who consumed it? Outside the saloon, he had paused a moment to allow his eyes to adjust themselves to the darkness before stepping swiftly along the boarded sidewalk. Then, in a few tense seconds, the tragedy happened: the shadow of a building across the street was stabbed by two shafts of flame, an in- visible hand seemed to snatch at Sudden's hat, and the wind of the other bullet fanned his cheek. Instantly his guns were out, spitting lead at shapeless deeper patches of shade, and a groan, followed by a curse, told him he had not fired in vain. A point puzzled him; if these were the men he suspected, there should have been three shots.

Then came the clatter of hastening feet from behind. He whirled round, peering through the gloom, and as the indistinct figure stumbled past a lighted window he caught the gleam of a drawn gun. This must be the other man. His weapon spoke again, and he smiled grimly as he heard the thud of a falling body. For a brief space he waited, watchful, alert, but no more shots came and he retraced his steps. It was plain now that the message had been but the bait to lure him into an ambuscade, but he wished to make sure. A form, sprawling untidily face downwards on the sidewalk, arrested him. He stooped and struck a match. The hat had fallen off, and the upper half of the head was an ugly blur ofred, but one glance told him that he had shot the only man in Pinetown he could call a friend.

"God ! " he muttered, and in a broken voice, "Dave, I never dreamed it might be yu. I'd sooner ..." His stunned faculties began to function again as he became aware of a stir in the quiet street; heads were protruding from newly-opened doors. Shooting was common enough--noisy revellers frequently expressed their emotion hy emptying their revolvers, but four quick shots followed by a single one pointed to something different. Sudden stood up; he must get away, and speedily. He had slain one much more popular than himself, and with whom he could have no quarrel; his many enemies would see that he paid the extreme penalty.

He was not minded to give them this satisfaction, and though his heart felt like a stone, he hurried to his quarters for rifle, saddle, and horse. When he emerged upon the street again he was recognized and a yell of execration came from the crowd round the body.

"There's the dawg what done it, that butcherin' marshal," shouted one who was nursing his right arm. "Never give the boy a chanct. Git him, fellas ! " A rush was made, and shots followed, but the light was poor; with a gesture of contempt, the fugitive vanished into the night. Pursuit had been prompt and patient, but Sud-den's Indian upbringing stood him in good stead and he was now satisfied that he had succeeded in throwing the posse off the trail. His body was free, but his mind was fettered by a merry, impudent face which grinned at him, mockingly, as it now seemed.

From a near-by sage-bush a rattlesnake--disturbed by their approach--reared its ugly head and sounded a warning. Instinctively the rider's right hand went to one of the walnut-butted weapons in his belt, only to drop away again.

"Hell, no," he said bitterly. "Can I do nothin' but kill? If it had been that whelp Javert now ..." The name of his chief enemy in Pinetown brought a 11 brooding frown. Javert' the gambler, whose crooked play he had exposed, thus earning the fellow's undying hatred; cunning, malignant, and cold-blooded as the reptile Sudden had just refrained from destroying. He it was who had planned the marshal's murder and so brought about Dave's death.

"I'm thinkin' a long whiles afore I draw a gun on a human bein' again, but that don't go for yu, Mister Javert; yu ain't human." The low voice, devoid of passion, made the threat doubly menacing.

"So Welcome is shy a marshal?" the customer said meditatively, as he stowed away the sacks of tobacco he had asked for.

The girl behind the counter nodded. "They got a meetin' about it--dunno why, seein' there's only one applicant," she replied.

"The job don't appear to be popular," he remarked. "It's unhealthy," she told him. "Our marshals seem to be unlucky, we've lost a couple in less than a year." The man's eyebrows rose. "Sounds kind o' wasteful," he said. "One o' them tough li'l towns, huh?"

"Our boys ain't so bad--mostly," the girl defended. "It's the no-'count visitors what drift in." She saw the dawning grin and blushed hotly. "O' course, I ain't meanin' "

"Shucks ! " the customer said gently. "Where did yu say this meetin' was?"

"At the Red Light Saloon--Ned Nippert, the owner, more or less runs Welcome. you ain't thinkin' of ?" She stopped, unaware that she was forgetting her Western upbringing.

"Why not?" came the unresenting reply. "I'm foot-loose 'bout now, an' a fella has gotta eat." He put down a bill and pushed back the change. "Buy yoreself a pretty," he smiled, and went out.

The girl's gaze followed him reflectively. "A cow-puncher,ridin' the chuck-line," she decided. "I hope he don't get that post--he couldn't hold it." Meanwhile, the object of her concern, having noted the name over the door, and mounted the black horse, was leisurely making his way to the Red Light. It proved to be a fair-sized building, constructed of timber and 'dobe, with a raised covered veranda in front. On this five men were sitting round a table bearing a bottle and glasses. The visitor got down and stepped towards them.

"I'm lookin' for a gent named Gowdy," he opened.

A stocky man with a wellnigh bald head stood up. "You've shorely found him," he said. "What you want?"

"Just bought some smokin' at yore place," the messenger explained. "Yore daughter asked me to mention that she's waitin'."