<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
<h3>THE DEATH OF DU SANG</h3></div>
<p>Whispering Smith, with his horse in a
lather, rode slowly back twenty minutes
later with Seagrue disarmed ahead of him. The
deserted battle-ground was alive with men.
Stormy Gorman, hot for blood, had come back,
captured Karg, and begun swearing all over again,
and Smith listened with amiable surprise while he
explained that seeing Dancing killed, and not being
able to tell from Whispering Smith’s peculiar
tactics which side he was shooting at, Gorman
and his companions had gone for help. While
they angrily surrounded Karg and Seagrue, Smith
slipped from his horse where Bill Dancing lay,
lifted the huge head from the dust, and tried to
turn the giant over. A groan greeted the attempt.</p>
<p>“Bill, open your eyes! Why would you not
do as I wanted you to?” he murmured bitterly to
himself. A second groan answered him. Smith
called for water, and from a canteen drenched the
pallid forehead, talking softly meanwhile; but his
efforts to restore consciousness were unavailing.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_306' name='page_306'></SPAN>306</span>
He turned to where two of the cowboys had
dragged Karg to the ground and three others had
their old companion Seagrue in hand. While two
held huge revolvers within six inches of his head,
the third was adjusting a rope-knot under his ear.</p>
<p>Whispering Smith became interested. “Hold
on!” said he mildly, “what is loose? What are
you going to do?”</p>
<p>“We’re going to hang these fellows,” answered
Stormy, with a volley of hair-raising imprecations.</p>
<p>“Oh, no! Just put them on horses under
guard.”</p>
<p>“That’s what we’re going to do,” exclaimed the
foreman. “Only we’re going to run ’em over to
those cottonwoods and drive the horses out from
under ’em. Stand still, you tow-headed cow-thief!”
he cried, slipping the noose up tight on
George Seagrue’s neck.</p>
<p>“See here,” returned Whispering Smith, showing
some annoyance, “you may be joking, but I
am not. Either do as I tell you or release those
men.”</p>
<p>“Well, I guess we are not joking very much.
You heard me, didn’t you?” demanded Stormy
angrily. “We are going to string these damned
critters up right here in the draw on the first tree.”</p>
<p>Whispering Smith drew a pocket-knife and
walked to Flat Nose, slit the rope around his neck,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_307' name='page_307'></SPAN>307</span>
pushed him out of the circle, and stood in front of
him. “You can’t play horse with my prisoners,”
he said curtly. “Get over here, Karg. Come,
now, who is going to walk in first? You act like
a school-boy, Gorman.”</p>
<p>Hard words and a wrangle followed, but Smith
did not change expression, and there was a backdown.
“Have you fellows let Du Sang get away
while you were playing fool here?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Du Sang’s over the hill there on his horse, and
full of fight yet,” exclaimed one.</p>
<p>“Then we will look him up,” suggested Smith.
“Come, Seagrue.”</p>
<p>“Don’t go over there. He’ll get you if you
do,” cried Gorman.</p>
<p>“Let us see about that. Seagrue, you and Karg
walk ahead. Don’t duck or run, either of you.
Go on.”</p>
<p>Just over the brow of the hill near which the
fight had taken place, a man lay below a ledge of
granite. The horse from which he had fallen was
grazing close by, but the man had dragged himself
out of the blinding sun to the shade of the
sagebrush above the rock––the trail of it all lay
very plain on the hard ground. Watching him
narrowly, Smith, with his prisoners ahead and the
cowboys riding in a circle behind, approached.</p>
<p>“Du Sang?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_308' name='page_308'></SPAN>308</span></div>
<p>The man in the sagebrush turned his head.</p>
<p>Smith walked to him and bent down. “Are
you suffering much, Du Sang?”</p>
<p>The wounded man, sinking with shock and internal
hemorrhage, uttered a string of oaths.</p>
<p>Smith listened quietly till he had done; then he
knelt beside him and put his hand on Du Sang’s
hand. “Tell me where you are hit, Du Sang.
Put your hand to it. Is it the stomach? Let me
turn you on your side. Easy. Does your belt
hurt? Just a minute, now; I can loosen that.”</p>
<p>“I know you,” muttered Du Sang thickly.
Then his eyes––terrible, rolling, pink eyes––brightened
and he swore violently.</p>
<p>“Du Sang, you are not bleeding much, but I’m
afraid you are badly hit,” said Whispering Smith.
“Is there anything I can do for you?”</p>
<p>“Get me some water.”</p>
<p>A creek flowed at no great distance below the
hill, but the cowboys refused to go for water.
Whispering Smith would have gone with Seagrue
and Karg, but Du Sang begged him not
to leave him alone lest Gorman should kill him.
Smith canvassed the situation a moment. “I’ll put
you on my horse,” said he at length, “and take
you down to the creek.”</p>
<p>He turned to the cowboys and asked them to
help, but they refused to touch Du Sang.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_309' name='page_309'></SPAN>309</span></div>
<p>Whispering Smith kept his patience. “Karg,
take that horse’s head,” said he. “Come here,
Seagrue; help me lift Du Sang on the horse. The
boys seem to be afraid of getting blood on their
hands.”</p>
<p>With Whispering Smith and Seagrue supporting
Du Sang in the saddle and Karg leading the
horse, the cavalcade moved slowly down to the
creek, where a tiny stream purled among the rocks.
The water revived the injured man for a moment;
he had even strength enough, with some help, to
ride again; and, moving in the same halting order,
they took him to Rebstock’s cabin. Rebstock,
at the door, refused to let the sinking man be
brought into the house. He cursed Du Sang as
the cause of all the trouble. But Du Sang cursed
him with usury, and, while Whispering Smith listened,
told Rebstock with bitter oaths that if he
had given the boy Barney anything but a scrub
horse they never would have been trailed. More
than this concerning the affair Du Sang would not
say, and never said. The procession turned from
the door. Seagrue led the way to Rebstock’s
stable, and they laid Du Sang on some hay.</p>
<p>Afterward they got a cot under him. With
surprising vitality he talked a long time to Whispering
Smith, but at last fell into a stupor. At
nine o’clock that night he sat up. Ed Banks and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_310' name='page_310'></SPAN>310</span>
Kennedy were standing beside the cot. Du Sang
became delirious, and in his delirium called the
name of Whispering Smith; but Smith was at
Baggs’s cabin with Bill Dancing. In a spasm of
pain, Du Sang, opening his eyes, suddenly threw
himself back. The cot broke, and the dying man
rolled under the feet of the frightened horses. In
the light of the lanterns they lifted him back, but
he was bleeding slowly at the mouth, quite dead.</p>
<p>The surgeon, afterward, found two fatal wounds
upon him. The first shot, passing through the
stomach, explained Du Sang’s failure to kill at a
distance in which, uninjured, he could have placed
five shots within the compass of a silver dollar.
Firing for Whispering Smith’s heart, he had, despite
the fearful shock, put four bullets through
his coat before the rifle-ball from the ground,
tearing at right angles across the path of the
first bullet, had cut down his life to a question
of hours.</p>
<p>Bill Dancing, who had been hit in the head and
stunned, had been moved back to the cabin at Mission
Spring, and lay in the little bedroom. A doctor
at Oroville had been sent for, but had not come.
At midnight of the second day, Smith, who was
beside his bed, saw him rouse up, and noted the
brightness of his eyes as he looked around.
“Bill,” he declared hopefully, as he sat beside the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_311' name='page_311'></SPAN>311</span>
bed, “you are better, hang it! I know you are.
How do you feel?”</p>
<p>“Ain’t that blamed doctor here yet? Then give
me my boots. I’m going back to Medicine Bend
to Doc Torpy.”</p>
<p>In the morning Whispering Smith, who had
cleansed and dressed the wound and felt sure the
bullet had not penetrated the skull, offered no objection
to the proposal beyond cautioning him to
ride slowly. “You can go down part way with
the prisoners, Bill,” suggested Whispering Smith.
“Brill Young is going to take them to Oroville,
and you can act as chairman of the guard.”</p>
<p>Before the party started, Smith called Seagrue
to him. “George, you saved my life once. Do
you remember––in the Pan Handle? Well, I gave
you yours twice in the Cache day before yesterday.
I don’t know how badly you are into this thing.
If you kept clear of the killing at Tower W I will
do what I can for you. Don’t talk to anybody.”</p>
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