<h2>CHAPTER XL</h2>
<h3>A SYMPATHETIC EAR</h3></div>
<p>When Whispering Smith rode after Sinclair,
Crawling Stone Ranch, in common
with the whole countryside, had but one interest in
life, and that was to hear of the meeting. Riders
across the mountain valleys met with but one
question; mail-carriers brought nothing in their
pouches of interest equal to the last word concerning
Sinclair or his pursuer. It was commonly
agreed through the mountains that it would be a
difficult matter to overhaul any good man riding
Sinclair’s steel-dust horses, but with Sinclair himself
in the saddle, unless it pleased him to pull up,
the chase was sure to be a stern one. Against this
to feed speculation stood one man’s record––that
of the man who had ridden alone across Deep
Creek and brought Chuck Williams out on a
buckboard.</p>
<p>Business in Medicine Bend, meantime, was
practically suspended. As the centre of all telephone
lines the big railroad town was likewise the
centre of all rumors. Officers and soldiers to and
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from the Fort, stage-drivers and cowmen, homesteaders
and rustlers, discussed the apprehension of
Sinclair. Moreover, behind this effort to arrest
one man who had savagely defied the law were
ranged all of the prejudices, sympathies, and
hatreds of the high country, and practically the
whole population tributary to Medicine Bend and
the Crawling Stone Valley were friends either to
Sinclair or to his pursuer. Behind Sinclair were
nearly all the cattlemen, not alone because he was
on good terms with the rustlers and protected his
friends, but because he warred openly on the
sheepmen. The big range interests, as a rule,
were openly or covertly friendly to Sinclair, while
against him were the homesteaders, the railroad
men, the common people, and the men who everywhere
hate cruelty and outrage and the making
of a lie.</p>
<p>Lance Dunning had never concealed his friendliness
for Sinclair, even after hard stories about
him were known to be true, and it was this confidence
of fellowship that made Sinclair, twenty-four
hours after he had left Oroville, ride down the
hill trail to Crawling Stone ranch-house.</p>
<p>The morning had been cold, with a heavy wind
and a dull sky. In the afternoon the clouds lowered
over the valley and a misting rain set in.
Dicksie had gone into Medicine Bend on the stage
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in the morning, and, after a stolen half-hour
with McCloud at Marion’s, had ridden home to
escape the storm. Not less, but much more, than
those about her she was alive to the situation in
which Sinclair stood and its danger to those closest
to her. In the morning her one prayer to McCloud
had been to have a care of himself, and to
Marion to have a care of herself; but even when
Dicksie left them it seemed as if neither quite felt
the peril as she felt it.</p>
<p>In the afternoon the rain, falling steadily, kept
her in the house, and she sat in her room sewing
until the light failed. She went downstairs. Puss
had lighted the grate in the living-room, and Dicksie
threw herself into a chair. The sound of hoofs
aroused her and she went to a window. To
her horror, she saw Sinclair walking with her
cousin up to the front door. She ran into the dining-room,
and the two men entered the hall and
walked into the office. Choking with excitement,
Dicksie ran through the kitchen and upstairs to
master her agitation.</p>
<p>In the office Sinclair was sitting down before the
hot stove with a tumbler of whiskey. “Lance”––he
shook his head as he spoke hoarsely––“I
want to say my friends have stood by me to a
man, but there’s none of them treated me squarer
through thick and thin than you have. Well,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_376' name='page_376'></SPAN>376</span>
I’ve had some bad luck. It can’t be helped.
Regards!”</p>
<p>He drank, and shook his wet hair again. Four
days of hard riding had left no trace on his iron
features. Wet to the bone, his eyes flashed with
fire. He held the glassful of whiskey in a hand
as steady as a spirit-level and tossed it down a
throat as cool as dew.</p>
<p>“I want to say another thing, Lance: I had no
more intention than a child of hurting Ed Banks.
I warned Ed months ago to keep out of this fight;
and I never knew he was in it till it was too late.
But I’m hoping he will pull through yet, if they
don’t kill him in the hospital to spite me. I never
recognized the men at all till it was too late.
Why, one of them used to work for me! A man
with the whole railroad gang in these mountains
after him has got to look out for himself or
his life ain’t worth a glass of beer. Thank you,
Lance, not any more. I saw two men, with their
rifles in their hands, looking for me. I hollered
at them; but, Lance, I’m rough and ready, as all
my friends know, and I will let no man put a drop
on me––that I will never do. Ed, before I ever
recognized him, raised his rifle; that’s the only
reason I fired. Not so full, Lance, not so full, if
you please. Well,” he shook his black hair as he
threw back his head, “here’s to better luck in
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worse countries!” He paused as he swallowed,
and set the tumbler down. “Lance, I’m saying
good-by to the mountains.”</p>
<p>“You’re not going away for good, Murray?”</p>
<p>“I’m going away for good. What’s the use?
For two years these railroad cutthroats have been
trying to put something on me; you know that.
They’ve been trying to mix me up with that bridge-burning
at Smoky Creek; Sugar Buttes, they had
me there; Tower W––nothing would do but I was
there, and they’ve got one of the men in jail down
there now, Lance, trying to sweat enough perjury
out of him to send me up. What show has a poor
man got against all the money there is in the country?
I wouldn’t be afraid of a jury of my own
neighbors––the men that know me, Lance––any
time. What show would I have with a packed
jury in Medicine Bend? I could explain anything
I’ve done to the satisfaction of any reasonable
man. I’m human, Lance; that’s all I say. I’ve
been mistreated and I don’t forget it. They’ve
even turned my wife against me––as fine a woman
as ever lived.”</p>
<p>Lance swore sympathetically. “There’s good
stuff in you yet, Murray.”</p>
<p>“I’m going to say good-by to the mountains,”
Sinclair went on grimly, “but I’m going to Medicine
Bend to-night and tell the man that has
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hounded me what I think of him before I leave.
I’m going to give my wife a chance to do what is
right and go with me. She’s been poisoned against
me––I know that; but if she does what’s fair and
square there’ll be no trouble––no trouble at all.
All I want, Lance, is a square deal. What?”</p>
<p>Dicksie with her pulses throbbing at fever-heat
heard the words. She stood half-way down
the stairs, trembling as she listened. Anger,
hatred, the spirit of vengeance, choked in her
throat at the sinister words. She longed to stride
into the room and confront the murderer and call
down retribution on his head. It was no fear of
him that restrained her, for the Crawling Stone
girl never knew fear. She would have confronted
him and denounced him, but prudence checked her
angry impulse. She knew what he meant to do––to
ride into Medicine Bend under cover of the
storm, murder the two he hated, and escape in the
night; and she resolved he should never succeed.
If she could only get to the telephone! But the
telephone was in the room where he sat. He was
saying good-by. Her cousin was trying to dissuade
him from riding out into the storm, but he
was going. The door opened; the men went out
on the porch, and it closed. Dicksie, lightly as a
shadow, ran into the office and began ringing
Medicine Bend on the telephone.</p>
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