<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
<h3><i>Settled In Full</i>.</h3>
<p>On a lonely part of the trail to town—queerly, it was when
he was rounding the low, barren hill where he and Dill had first
met—he took out his brand-book and went over the situation.
It was Barney he rode, and Barney could be trusted to pace along
decorously with the reins twisted twice around the saddle-horn, so
Billy gave no thought to his horse but put his whole mind on the
figures. He was not much used to these things; beyond keeping tally
of the stock at branding and shipping time and putting down what
details of his business he dared not trust to memory, a pencil was
strange to his fingers. But the legal phrases in the paper left by
Dill and signed by the cook and night-hawk as witnesses gave him a
heavy sense of responsibility that everything should be settled
exactly right. So now he went over the figures slowly, adding them
from the top down and from the bottom up, to make sure he had the
totals correct. He wished they were wrong; they might then be not
quite so depressing.</p>
<p>"Lemme see, now. I turned over 4,523 head uh stock, all told
(hell of a fine job uh guessing I done! Me saying there'd be over
six thousand!) That made $94,983. And accordin' to old
Brown—and I guess he had it framed up correct—Dilly
owes him $2,217 yet, instead uh coming out with enough to start
some other business. It's sure queer, the way figures always come
out little when yuh want 'em big, and big when yuh want 'em little!
Them debts now—they could stand a lot uh shavin' down. Twelve
thousand dollars and interest, to the bank—I can't do a darn
thing about them twelve thousand. If Dilly hadn't gone and made a
cast-iron agreement I coulda held old Brown up for a few thousand
more, on account uh the increase in saddle-stock. I'd worked that
bunch up till it sure was a dandy lot uh hosses—but what yuh
going to do?"</p>
<p>He stared dispiritedly out across the brown prairie. "I'd oughta
put Dilly next to that, only I never thought about it at the time,
and I was so dead sure the range-stuff—And there's the men,
got to have their money right away quick, so's they can hurry up
and blow it in! If Dilly ain't back to-night, or I don't hear from
him, I reckon I'll have to draw m' little old wad out uh the bank
and pay the sons-uh-guns. I sure ain't going to need it to buy
dishes and rocking chairs and pictures—and I was going t' git
her a piano—oh, hell!"</p>
<p>He still rode slowly, after that, but he did not bother over the
figures that stood for Dilly's debts. He sat humped over the
saddle-horn like an old man and stared at the trail and at the
forefeet of Barney coming down <i>pluck, pluck</i> with leisurely
regularity in the dust. Just so was Charming Billy Boyle trampling
down the dreams that had been so sweet in the dreaming, and
leveling ruthlessly the very foundations of the fair castle he had
builded in the air for Dill and himself—and one other, with
the fairest, highest, most secret chambers for that Other. And as
he rode, the face of him was worn and the blue eyes of him sombre
and dull; and his mouth, that had lost utterly the humorous,
care-free quirk at the corners, was bitter, and straight, and
hard.</p>
<p>He had started out with such naïve assurance to succeed,
and—he had failed so utterly, so hopelessly, with not even a
spectacular crash to make the failing picturesque. He had done the
best that was in him, and even now that it was over he could not
quite understand how everything, <i>everything</i> could go like
that; how the Double-Crank and Flora—how the range, even, had
slipped from him. And now Dill was gone, too, and he did not even
know where, or if he would ever come back.</p>
<p>He would pay the men; he had, with a surprising thrift, saved
nearly a thousand dollars in the bank at Tower. That, to be sure,
was when he had Flora to save for; since then he had not had time
or opportunity to spend it foolishly. It would take nearly every
dollar; the way he had figured it, he would have just twenty-three
dollars left for himself—and he would have the little bunch
of horses he had in his prosperity acquired for the pure love of
owning a good horse. He would sell the horses, except Barney and
one to pack his bed, and he would drift—drift just as do the
range-cattle when a blizzard strikes them in the open. Billy felt
like a stray. His range was gone—gone utterly. He would roll
his bed and drift; and perhaps, somewhere, he could find a stretch
of earth as God had left it, unscarred by fence and plow, undefiled
by cabbages and sugar-beets (Brown's new settlers were going strong
on sugar-beets).</p>
<p>"Well, it's all over but the shouting," he summed up grimly when
Hardup came in sight. "I'll pay off the men and turn 'em
loose—all but Jim. Somebody's got to stay with the Bridger
place till Dilly shows up, seeing that's all he's got left after
the clean-up. The rest uh the debts can wait. Brown's mortgage
ain't due yet" (Billy had his own way of looking at financial
matters) "and the old Siwash ain't got any kick comin' if he never
gets another cent out uh Dilly. The bank ain't got the cards to
call Dilly now, for his note ain't due till near Christmas. So I
reckon all I got to do after I pay the boys is take m' little old
twenty-three plunks, and my hosses—if I can't sell 'em right
off—and pull out for
God-knows-where-and-I-don't-care-a-damn!"</p>
<hr />
<p>Charming Billy Boyle had done all that he had planned to do,
except that he had not yet pulled out for the place he had named
picturesquely for himself. Much as at the beginning, he was leaning
heavily upon the bar in the Hardup Saloon, and his hat was pushed
back on his head; but he was not hilarious to the point of singing
about "the young thing," and he was not, to any appreciable extent,
enjoying himself. He was merely adding what he considered the
proper finishing touch to his calamities. He was spinning silver
dollars, one by one, across the bar to the man with the near-white
apron, and he was endeavoring to get the worth of them down his
throat. To be sure, he was being assisted, now and then, by several
acquaintances; but considering the fact that a man's stomach has
certain well-defined limitations, he was doing very well,
indeed.</p>
<p>When he had spun the twenty-third dollar to the bartender, Billy
meant to quit drinking for the present; after that, he was not
quite clear as to his intentions, farther than "forking his hoss
and pulling out" when there was no more to be done. He felt
uneasily that between his present occupation and the pulling-out
process lay a duty unperformed, but until the door swung open just
as he was crying, "Come on, fellows," he had not been able to name
it.</p>
<p>The Pilgrim it was who entered jauntily; the Pilgrim, who had
not chanced to meet Billy once during the summer, and so was not
aware that the truce between them was ended for good and all. He
knew that Billy had not at any time been what one might call
cordial, but that last stare of displeasure when they met in the
creek at the Double-Crank, he had set down to a peevish mood. Under
the circumstances, it was natural that he should walk up to the bar
with the rest. Under the circumstances, it was also natural that
Billy should object to this unexpected and unwelcome guest, and
that the vague, unperformed duty should suddenly flash into his
mind clear, and well-defined, and urgent.</p>
<p>"Back up, Pilgrim," was his quiet way of making known his
purpose. "Yuh can't drink on <i>my</i> money, old-timer, nor use a
room that I'm honoring with my presence. Just right now, I'm
<i>here</i>. It's up to you to back out—<i>away</i>
out—clean outside and across the street."</p>
<p>The Pilgrim did not move.</p>
<p>Billy had been drinking, but his brain was not of the stuff that
fuddles easily, and he was not, as the Pilgrim believed, drunk. His
eyes when he stared hard at the Pilgrim were sober eyes, sane
eyes—and something besides.</p>
<p>"I said it," he reminded softly, when men had quit shuffling
their feet and the room was very still.</p>
<p>"I don't reckon yuh know what yuh said," the Pilgrim retorted,
laughing uneasily and shifting his gaze a bit. "What they been
doping yuh with, Bill? There ain't any quarrel between you and me
no more." His tone was abominably, condescendingly tolerant, and
his look was the look which a mastiff turns wearily upon a
hysterical toy-terrier yapping foolishly at his knees. For the
Pilgrim had changed much in the past year and more during which men
had respected him because he was not considered quite safe to
trifle with. According to the reputation they gave him, he had
killed a man who had tried to kill him, and he could therefore
afford to be pacific upon occasion.</p>
<p>Billy stared at him while he drew a long breath; a breath which
seemed to press back a tangible weight of hatred and utter contempt
for the Pilgrim; a breath while it seemed that he must kill him
there and stamp out the very semblance of humanity from his mocking
face.</p>
<p>"Yuh don't know of any quarrel between you and me? Yuh say yuh
don't?" Billy's voice trembled a little, because of the murder-lust
that gripped him. "Well, pretty soon, I'll start in and tell yuh
all about it—maybe. Right now, I'm going t' give a new
one—one that yuh can easy name and do what yuh damn' please
about." Whereupon he did as he had done once before when the
offender had been a sheepherder. He stepped quickly to one side of
the Pilgrim, emptied a glass down inside his collar, struck him
sharply across his grinning mouth, and stepped back—back
until there were eight or ten feet between them.</p>
<p>"That's the only way <i>my</i> whisky can go down <i>your</i>
neck!" he said.</p>
<p>Men gasped and moved hastily out of range, never doubting what
would happen next. Billy himself knew—or thought he
knew—and his hand was on his gun, ready to pull it and shoot;
hungry—waiting for an excuse to fire.</p>
<p>The Pilgrim had given a bellow that was no word at all, and
whirled to come at Billy; met his eyes, wavered and hesitated, his
gun in his hand and half-raised to fire.</p>
<p>Billy, bent on giving the Pilgrim a fair chance, waited another
second; waited and saw fear creep into the bold eyes of the
Pilgrim; waited and saw the inward cringing of the man. It was like
striking a dog and waiting for the spring at your throat promised
by his snarling defiance, and then seeing the fire go from his eyes
as he grovels, cringingly confessing you his master, himself a
cur.</p>
<p>What had been hate in the eyes of Billy changed slowly to
incredulous contempt. "Ain't that enough?" he cried disgustedly.
"My God, ain't yuh <i>man</i> enough—Have I got to take yuh
by the ear and slit your gullet like they stick pigs—or else
let yuh <i>go</i>? What <i>are</i> yuh, anyhow? Shall I give my gun
to the bar-keep and go out where it's dark? Will yuh be scared to
tackle me then?" He laughed and watched the yellow terror creep
over the face of the Pilgrim at the taunt. "What's wrong with your
gun? Ain't it working good to-night? Ain't it loaded?</p>
<p>"Heavens and earth! What else have I got to do before you'll
come alive? You've been living on your rep as a bad man to monkey
with, and pushing out your wishbone over it for quite a spell,
now—why don't yuh get busy and collect another bunch uh
admiration from these fellows? <i>I</i> ain't no lightning-shot
man! Papa Death don't roost on the end uh my six-gun—or I
never suspicioned before that he did; but from the save-me-quick
look on yuh, I believe yuh'd faint plumb away if I let yuh take a
look at the end uh my gun, with the butt-end toward yuh!</p>
<p>"Honest t' God, Pilgrim, I won't try to get in ahead uh yuh! I
couldn't if I tried, because mine's at m' belt yet and I ain't so
swift. Come on! Please—<i>purty</i> please!" Billy looked
around the room and laughed. He pointed his finger mockingly "Ain't
he a peach of a Bad Man, boys? Ain't yuh proud uh his acquaintance?
I reckon I'll have to turn my back before he'll cut loose. Yuh
know, he's just aching t' kill me—only he don't want me to
know it when he does! He's afraid he might hurt m' feelings!"</p>
<p>He swung back to the Pilgrim, went close, and looked at him
impertinently, his head on one side. He reached out deliberately
with his hand, and the Pilgrim ducked and cringed away. "Aw, look
here!" he whined. "<i>I</i> ain't done nothing to yuh, Bill!"</p>
<p>Billy's hand dropped slowly and hung at his side.
"Yuh—damned—coward!" he gritted. "Yuh know yuh wouldn't
get any more than an even break with me, and that ain't enough for
yuh. You're afraid to take a chance. You're afraid—God!" he
cried suddenly, swept out of his mockery by the rage within. "And I
can't kill yuh! Yuh won't show nerve enough to give me a chance!
Yuh won't even <i>fight</i>, will yuh?"</p>
<p>He leaned and struck the Pilgrim savagely. "Get out uh my sight,
then! Get out uh town! Get clean out uh the country! Get out among
the coyotes—they're nearer your breed than men!" For every
sentence there was a stinging blow—a blow with the flat of
his hand, driving the Pilgrim back, step by step, to the door. The
Pilgrim, shielding his head with an uplifted arm, turned then and
bolted out into the night.</p>
<div class="figure" style="width:70%;"><SPAN href="images/ls003.jpg"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src="images/ls003.jpg" alt="" /></SPAN></div>
<p>Behind him were men who stood ashamed for their manhood, not
caring to look straight at one another with so sickening an example
before them of the craven coward a man may be. In the doorway,
Billy stood framed against the yellow lamplight, a hand pressing
hard against the casings while he leaned and hurled curses in a
voice half-sobbing with rage.</p>
<p>It was so that Dill found him when he came looking. When he
reached out and laid a big-knuckled hand gently on his arm, Billy
shivered and stared at him in a queer, dazed fashion for a
minute.</p>
<p>"Why—hello, Dilly!" he said then, and his voice was hoarse
and broken. "Where the dickens did <i>you</i> come from?"</p>
<p>Without a word Dill, still holding him by the arm, led him
unresisting away.</p>
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