<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
<h3>A TEST</h3></div>
<p>Du Sang had the sidewise gait of a wolf,
and crossed the street with the choppy walk
of the man out of a long saddle. Being both uncertain
and quick, he was a man to slip a trail easily.
He travelled around the block and disappeared
among the many open doors that blazed along
Hill Street. Less alert trailers than the two behind
him would have been at fault; but when he
entered the place he was looking for, Kennedy
was so close that Du Sang could have spoken to
him had he turned around.</p>
<p>Kennedy passed directly ahead. A moment
later Whispering Smith put his head inside the
door of the joint Du Sang had entered, withdrew
it, and, rejoining his companions, spoke in an undertone:
“A negro dive; he’s lying low. Now we
will keep our regular order. It’s a half-basement,
with a bar on the left; crap games at the table
behind the screen on the right. Kennedy, will you
take the rear end of the bar? It covers the whole
room and the back door. George, pass in ahead
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_156' name='page_156'></SPAN>156</span>
of me and step just to the left of the slot machine;
you’ve got the front door there and everything
behind the screen, and I can get close to Du Sang.
Look for a thinnish, yellow-faced man with a
brown hat and a brown shirt––and pink eyes––shooting
craps under this window. I’ll shoot craps
with him. Is your heart pumping, George?
Never mind, this is easy! Farrell, you’re first!”</p>
<p>The dive, badly lighted and ventilated, was
counted tough among tough places. White men
and colored mixed before the bar and about the
tables. When Smith stepped around the screen
and into the flare of the hanging lamps, Du Sang
stood in the small corner below the screened street
window. McCloud, though vitally interested in
looking at the man that had come to town to kill
him, felt his attention continually wandering back
to Whispering Smith. The clatter of the rolling
dice, the guttural jargon of the negro gamblers,
the drift of men to and from the bar, and the
clouds of tobacco smoke made a hazy background
for the stoop-shouldered man with his gray hat and
shabby coat, dust-covered and travel-stained. Industriously
licking the broken wrapper of a cheap
cigar and rolling it fondly under his forefinger, he
was making his way unostentatiously toward Du
Sang. Thirty-odd men were in the saloon, but only
two knew what the storm centre moving slowly
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_157' name='page_157'></SPAN>157</span>
across the room might develop. Kennedy, seeing
everything and talking pleasantly with one of the
barkeepers, his close-set teeth gleaming twenty
feet away, stood at the end of the bar sliding an
empty glass between his hands. Whispering Smith
pushed past the on-lookers to get to the end of the
table where Du Sang was shooting. He made no
effort to attract Du Sang’s attention, and when the
latter looked up he could have pulled the gray hat
from the head of the man whose brown eyes were
mildly fixed on Du Sang’s dice; they were lying
just in front of Smith. Looking indifferently at
the intruder, Du Sang reached for the dice: just
ahead of his right hand, Whispering Smith’s right
hand, the finger-tips extended on the table, rested
in front of them; it might have been through accident
or it might have been through design. In
his left hand Smith held the broken cigar, and
without looking at Du Sang he passed the wrapper
again over the tip of his tongue and slowly across
his lips.</p>
<p>Du Sang now looked sharply at him, and Smith
looked at his cigar. Others were playing around
the semicircular table––it might mean nothing.
Du Sang waited. Smith lifted his right hand from
the table and felt in his waistcoat for a match.
Du Sang, however, made no effort to take up the
dice. He watched Whispering Smith scratch a
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_158' name='page_158'></SPAN>158</span>
match on the table, and, either because it failed to
light or through design, it was scratched the second
time on the table, marking a cross between the
two dice.</p>
<p>The meanest negro in the joint would not have
stood that, yet Du Sang hesitated. Whispering
Smith, mildly surprised, looked up. “Hello,
Pearline! You shooting here?” He pushed the
dice back toward the outlaw. “Shoot again!”</p>
<p>Du Sang, scowling, snapped the dice and threw
badly.</p>
<p>“Up jump the devil, is it? Shoot again!”
And, pushing back the dice, Smith moved closer to
Du Sang. The two men touched arms. Du Sang,
threatened in a way wholly new to him, waited
like a snake braved by a mysterious enemy. His
eyes blinked like a badger’s. He caught up the dice
and threw. “Is that the best you can do?” asked
Smith. “See here!” He took up the dice.
“Shoot with me!” Smith threw the dice up the
table toward Du Sang. Once he threw craps, but,
reaching directly in front of Du Sang, he picked
the dice up and threw eleven. “Shoot with me,
Du Sang.”</p>
<p>“What’s your game?” snapped Du Sang, with
an oath.</p>
<p>“What do you care, if I’ve got the coin? I’ll
throw you for twenty-dollar gold pieces.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_159' name='page_159'></SPAN>159</span></div>
<p>Du Sang’s eyes glittered. Unable to understand
the reason for the affront, he stood like a
cat waiting to spring. “This is my game!” he
snarled.</p>
<p>“Then play it.”</p>
<p>“Look here, what do you want?” he demanded
angrily.</p>
<p>Smith stepped closer. “Any game you’ve got.
I’ll throw you left-handed, Du Sang.” With his
right hand he snapped the dice under Du Sang’s
nose and looked squarely into his eyes. “Got any
Sugar Buttes money?”</p>
<p>Du Sang for an instant looked keenly back; his
eyes contracted in that time to a mere narrow slit;
then, sudden as thought, he sprang back into the
corner. He knew now. This was the man who
held the aces at the barbecue, the railroad man––Whispering
Smith. Kennedy, directly across the
table, watched the lightning-like move. For the
first time the crap-dealer looked impatiently up.</p>
<p>It was a showdown. No one watching the two
men under the window breathed for a moment.
Whispering Smith, motionless, only watched the
half-closed eyes. “You can’t shoot craps,” he said
coldly. “What can you shoot, Pearline? You
can’t stop a man on horseback.”</p>
<p>Du Sang knew he must try for a quick kill or
make a retreat. He took in the field at a glance.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_160' name='page_160'></SPAN>160</span>
Kennedy’s teeth gleamed only ten feet away, and
with his right hand half under his coat lapel he
toyed with his watch-chain. McCloud had moved
in from the slot machine and stood at the point of
the table, looking at Du Sang and laughing at him.
Whispering Smith threw off all pretence. “Take
your hand away from your gun, you albino! I’ll
blow your head off left-handed if you pull! Will
you get out of this town to-night? If you can’t
drop a man in the saddle at two hundred and fifty
yards, what do you think you’d look like after a
break with me? Go back to the whelp that hired
you, and tell him when he wants a friend of mine
to send a man that can shoot. If you are within
twenty miles of Medicine Bend at daylight I’ll
rope you like a fat cow and drag you down Front
Street!”</p>
<p>Du Sang, with burning eyes, shrank narrower
and smaller into his corner, ready to shoot if he
had to, but not liking the chances. No man in
Williams Cache could pull or shoot with Du Sang,
but no man in the mountains had ever drawn successfully
against the man that faced him.</p>
<p>Whispering Smith saw that he would not draw.
He taunted him again in low tones, and, backing
away, spoke laughingly to McCloud. While Kennedy
covered the corner, Smith backed to the door
and waited for the two to join him. They halted
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_161' name='page_161'></SPAN>161</span>
a moment at the door, then they backed slowly up
the steps and out into the street.</p>
<p>There was no talk till they reached the Wickiup
office. “Now, will some of you tell me who Du
Sang is?” asked McCloud, after Kennedy and
Whispering Smith with banter and laughing had
gone over the scene.</p>
<p>Kennedy picked up the ruler. “The wickedest,
cruelest man in the bunch––and the best shot.”</p>
<p>“Where is your hat, George––the one he put
the bullet through?” asked Whispering Smith,
limp in the big chair. “Burn it up; he thinks he
missed you. Burn it up now. Never let him find
out what a close call you had. Du Sang! Yes, he
is cold-blooded as a wild-cat and cruel as a soft
bullet. Du Sang would shoot a dying man,
George, just to keep him squirming in the dirt.
Did you ever see such eyes in a human being, set
like that and blinking so in the light? It’s bad
enough to watch a man when you can see his eyes.
Here’s hoping we’re done with him!”</p>
<hr class='toprule' />
<div class='chsp'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_162' name='page_162'></SPAN>162</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XVIII_NEW_PLANS' id='CHAPTER_XVIII_NEW_PLANS'></SPAN>
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