<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 22 </h2>
<p>Within a month after his departure from San Francisco, Marcus had "gone in
on a cattle ranch" in the Panamint Valley with an Englishman, an
acquaintance of Mr. Sieppe's. His headquarters were at a place called
Modoc, at the lower extremity of the valley, about fifty miles by trail to
the south of Keeler.</p>
<p>His life was the life of a cowboy. He realized his former vision of
himself, booted, sombreroed, and revolvered, passing his days in the
saddle and the better part of his nights around the poker tables in
Modoc's one saloon. To his intense satisfaction he even involved himself
in a gun fight that arose over a disputed brand, with the result that two
fingers of his left hand were shot away.</p>
<p>News from the outside world filtered slowly into the Panamint Valley, and
the telegraph had never been built beyond Keeler. At intervals one of the
local papers of Independence, the nearest large town, found its way into
the cattle camps on the ranges, and occasionally one of the Sunday
editions of a Sacramento journal, weeks old, was passed from hand to hand.
Marcus ceased to hear from the Sieppes. As for San Francisco, it was as
far from him as was London or Vienna.</p>
<p>One day, a fortnight after McTeague's flight from San Francisco, Marcus
rode into Modoc, to find a group of men gathered about a notice affixed to
the outside of the Wells-Fargo office. It was an offer of reward for the
arrest and apprehension of a murderer. The crime had been committed in San
Francisco, but the man wanted had been traced as far as the western
portion of Inyo County, and was believed at that time to be in hiding in
either the Pinto or Panamint hills, in the vicinity of Keeler.</p>
<p>Marcus reached Keeler on the afternoon of that same day. Half a mile from
the town his pony fell and died from exhaustion. Marcus did not stop even
to remove the saddle. He arrived in the barroom of the hotel in Keeler
just after the posse had been made up. The sheriff, who had come down from
Independence that morning, at first refused his offer of assistance. He
had enough men already—too many, in fact. The country travelled
through would be hard, and it would be difficult to find water for so many
men and horses.</p>
<p>"But none of you fellers have ever seen um," vociferated Marcus, quivering
with excitement and wrath. "I know um well. I could pick um out in a
million. I can identify um, and you fellers can't. And I knew—I knew—good
GOD! I knew that girl—his wife—in Frisco. She's a cousin of
mine, she is—she was—I thought once of—This thing's a
personal matter of mine—an' that money he got away with, that five
thousand, belongs to me by rights. Oh, never mind, I'm going along. Do you
hear?" he shouted, his fists raised, "I'm going along, I tell you. There
ain't a man of you big enough to stop me. Let's see you try and stop me
going. Let's see you once, any two of you." He filled the barroom with his
clamor.</p>
<p>"Lord love you, come along, then," said the sheriff.</p>
<p>The posse rode out of Keeler that same night. The keeper of the general
merchandise store, from whom Marcus had borrowed a second pony, had
informed them that Cribbens and his partner, whose description tallied
exactly with that given in the notice of reward, had outfitted at his
place with a view to prospecting in the Panamint hills. The posse trailed
them at once to their first camp at the head of the valley. It was an easy
matter. It was only necessary to inquire of the cowboys and range riders
of the valley if they had seen and noted the passage of two men, one of
whom carried a bird cage.</p>
<p>Beyond this first camp the trail was lost, and a week was wasted in a
bootless search around the mine at Gold Gulch, whither it seemed probable
the partners had gone. Then a travelling peddler, who included Gold Gulch
in his route, brought in the news of a wonderful strike of gold-bearing
quartz some ten miles to the south on the western slope of the range. Two
men from Keeler had made a strike, the peddler had said, and added the
curious detail that one of the men had a canary bird in a cage with him.</p>
<p>The posse made Cribbens's camp three days after the unaccountable
disappearance of his partner. Their man was gone, but the narrow hoof
prints of a mule, mixed with those of huge hob-nailed boots, could be
plainly followed in the sand. Here they picked up the trail and held to it
steadily till the point was reached where, instead of tending southward it
swerved abruptly to the east. The men could hardly believe their eyes.</p>
<p>"It ain't reason," exclaimed the sheriff. "What in thunder is he up to?
This beats me. Cutting out into Death Valley at this time of year."</p>
<p>"He's heading for Gold Mountain over in the Armagosa, sure."</p>
<p>The men decided that this conjecture was true. It was the only inhabited
locality in that direction. A discussion began as to the further movements
of the posse.</p>
<p>"I don't figure on going into that alkali sink with no eight men and
horses," declared the sheriff. "One man can't carry enough water to take
him and his mount across, let alone EIGHT. No, sir. Four couldn't do it.
No, THREE couldn't. We've got to make a circuit round the valley and come
up on the other side and head him off at Gold Mountain. That's what we got
to do, and ride like hell to do it, too."</p>
<p>But Marcus protested with all the strength of his lungs against abandoning
the trail now that they had found it. He argued that they were but a day
and a half behind their man now. There was no possibility of their missing
the trail—as distinct in the white alkali as in snow. They could
make a dash into the valley, secure their man, and return long before
their water failed them. He, for one, would not give up the pursuit, now
that they were so close. In the haste of the departure from Keeler the
sheriff had neglected to swear him in. He was under no orders. He would do
as he pleased.</p>
<p>"Go on, then, you darn fool," answered the sheriff. "We'll cut on round
the valley, for all that. It's a gamble he'll be at Gold Mountain before
you're half way across. But if you catch him, here"—he tossed Marcus
a pair of handcuffs—"put 'em on him and bring him back to Keeler."</p>
<p>Two days after he had left the posse, and when he was already far out in
the desert, Marcus's horse gave out. In the fury of his impatience he had
spurred mercilessly forward on the trail, and on the morning of the third
day found that his horse was unable to move. The joints of his legs seemed
locked rigidly. He would go his own length, stumbling and interfering,
then collapse helplessly upon the ground with a pitiful groan. He was used
up.</p>
<p>Marcus believed himself to be close upon McTeague now. The ashes at his
last camp had still been smoldering. Marcus took what supplies of food and
water he could carry, and hurried on. But McTeague was farther ahead than
he had guessed, and by evening of his third day upon the desert Marcus,
raging with thirst, had drunk his last mouthful of water and had flung
away the empty canteen.</p>
<p>"If he ain't got water with um," he said to himself as he pushed on, "If
he ain't got water with um, by damn! I'll be in a bad way. I will, for a
fact."</p>
<p>* * * * * * * * * * * * *</p>
<p>At Marcus's shout McTeague looked up and around him. For the instant he
saw no one. The white glare of alkali was still unbroken. Then his swiftly
rolling eyes lighted upon a head and shoulder that protruded above the low
crest of the break directly in front of him. A man was there, lying at
full length upon the ground, covering him with a revolver. For a few
seconds McTeague looked at the man stupidly, bewildered, confused, as yet
without definite thought. Then he noticed that the man was singularly like
Marcus Schouler. It WAS Marcus Schouler. How in the world did Marcus
Schouler come to be in that desert? What did he mean by pointing a pistol
at him that way? He'd best look out or the pistol would go off. Then his
thoughts readjusted themselves with a swiftness born of a vivid sense of
danger. Here was the enemy at last, the tracker he had felt upon his
footsteps. Now at length he had "come on" and shown himself, after all
those days of skulking. McTeague was glad of it. He'd show him now. They
two would have it out right then and there. His rifle! He had thrown it
away long since. He was helpless. Marcus had ordered him to put up his
hands. If he did not, Marcus would kill him. He had the drop on him.
McTeague stared, scowling fiercely at the levelled pistol. He did not
move.</p>
<p>"Hands up!" shouted Marcus a second time. "I'll give you three to do it
in. One, two——"</p>
<p>Instinctively McTeague put his hands above his head.</p>
<p>Marcus rose and came towards him over the break.</p>
<p>"Keep 'em up," he cried. "If you move 'em once I'll kill you, sure."</p>
<p>He came up to McTeague and searched him, going through his pockets; but
McTeague had no revolver; not even a hunting knife.</p>
<p>"What did you do with that money, with that five thousand dollars?"</p>
<p>"It's on the mule," answered McTeague, sullenly.</p>
<p>Marcus grunted, and cast a glance at the mule, who was standing some
distance away, snorting nervously, and from time to time flattening his
long ears.</p>
<p>"Is that it there on the horn of the saddle, there in that canvas sack?"
Marcus demanded.</p>
<p>"Yes, that's it."</p>
<p>A gleam of satisfaction came into Marcus's eyes, and under his breath he
muttered:</p>
<p>"Got it at last."</p>
<p>He was singularly puzzled to know what next to do. He had got McTeague.
There he stood at length, with his big hands over his head, scowling at
him sullenly. Marcus had caught his enemy, had run down the man for whom
every officer in the State had been looking. What should he do with him
now? He couldn't keep him standing there forever with his hands over his
head.</p>
<p>"Got any water?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"There's a canteen of water on the mule."</p>
<p>Marcus moved toward the mule and made as if to reach the bridle-rein. The
mule squealed, threw up his head, and galloped to a little distance,
rolling his eyes and flattening his ears.</p>
<p>Marcus swore wrathfully.</p>
<p>"He acted that way once before," explained McTeague, his hands still in
the air. "He ate some loco-weed back in the hills before I started."</p>
<p>For a moment Marcus hesitated. While he was catching the mule McTeague
might get away. But where to, in heaven's name? A rat could not hide on
the surface of that glistening alkali, and besides, all McTeague's store
of provisions and his priceless supply of water were on the mule. Marcus
ran after the mule, revolver in hand, shouting and cursing. But the mule
would not be caught. He acted as if possessed, squealing, lashing out, and
galloping in wide circles, his head high in the air.</p>
<p>"Come on," shouted Marcus, furious, turning back to McTeague. "Come on,
help me catch him. We got to catch him. All the water we got is on the
saddle."</p>
<p>McTeague came up.</p>
<p>"He's eatun some loco-weed," he repeated. "He went kinda crazy once
before."</p>
<p>"If he should take it into his head to bolt and keep on running——"</p>
<p>Marcus did not finish. A sudden great fear seemed to widen around and
inclose the two men. Once their water gone, the end would not be long.</p>
<p>"We can catch him all right," said the dentist. "I caught him once
before."</p>
<p>"Oh, I guess we can catch him," answered Marcus, reassuringly.</p>
<p>Already the sense of enmity between the two had weakened in the face of a
common peril. Marcus let down the hammer of his revolver and slid it back
into the holster.</p>
<p>The mule was trotting on ahead, snorting and throwing up great clouds of
alkali dust. At every step the canvas sack jingled, and McTeague's bird
cage, still wrapped in the flour-bags, bumped against the saddlepads. By
and by the mule stopped, blowing out his nostrils excitedly.</p>
<p>"He's clean crazy," fumed Marcus, panting and swearing.</p>
<p>"We ought to come up on him quiet," observed McTeague.</p>
<p>"I'll try and sneak up," said Marcus; "two of us would scare him again.
You stay here."</p>
<p>Marcus went forward a step at a time. He was almost within arm's length of
the bridle when the mule shied from him abruptly and galloped away.</p>
<p>Marcus danced with rage, shaking his fists, and swearing horribly. Some
hundred yards away the mule paused and began blowing and snuffing in the
alkali as though in search of feed. Then, for no reason, he shied again,
and started off on a jog trot toward the east.</p>
<p>"We've GOT to follow him," exclaimed Marcus as McTeague came up. "There's
no water within seventy miles of here."</p>
<p>Then began an interminable pursuit. Mile after mile, under the terrible
heat of the desert sun, the two men followed the mule, racked with a
thirst that grew fiercer every hour. A dozen times they could almost touch
the canteen of water, and as often the distraught animal shied away and
fled before them. At length Marcus cried:</p>
<p>"It's no use, we can't catch him, and we're killing ourselves with thirst.
We got to take our chances." He drew his revolver from its holster, cocked
it, and crept forward.</p>
<p>"Steady, now," said McTeague; "it won' do to shoot through the canteen."</p>
<p>Within twenty yards Marcus paused, made a rest of his left forearm and
fired.</p>
<p>"You GOT him," cried McTeague. "No, he's up again. Shoot him again. He's
going to bolt."</p>
<p>Marcus ran on, firing as he ran. The mule, one foreleg trailing, scrambled
along, squealing and snorting. Marcus fired his last shot. The mule
pitched forward upon his head, then, rolling sideways, fell upon the
canteen, bursting it open and spilling its entire contents into the sand.</p>
<p>Marcus and McTeague ran up, and Marcus snatched the battered canteen from
under the reeking, bloody hide. There was no water left. Marcus flung the
canteen from him and stood up, facing McTeague. There was a pause.</p>
<p>"We're dead men," said Marcus.</p>
<p>McTeague looked from him out over the desert. Chaotic desolation stretched
from them on either hand, flaming and glaring with the afternoon heat.
There was the brazen sky and the leagues upon leagues of alkali, leper
white. There was nothing more. They were in the heart of Death Valley.</p>
<p>"Not a drop of water," muttered McTeague; "not a drop of water."</p>
<p>"We can drink the mule's blood," said Marcus. "It's been done before. But—but—"
he looked down at the quivering, gory body—"but I ain't thirsty
enough for that yet."</p>
<p>"Where's the nearest water?"</p>
<p>"Well, it's about a hundred miles or more back of us in the Panamint
hills," returned Marcus, doggedly. "We'd be crazy long before we reached
it. I tell you, we're done for, by damn, we're DONE for. We ain't ever
going to get outa here."</p>
<p>"Done for?" murmured the other, looking about stupidly. "Done for, that's
the word. Done for? Yes, I guess we're done for."</p>
<p>"What are we going to do NOW?" exclaimed Marcus, sharply, after a while.</p>
<p>"Well, let's—let's be moving along—somewhere."</p>
<p>"WHERE, I'd like to know? What's the good of moving on?"</p>
<p>"What's the good of stopping here?"</p>
<p>There was a silence.</p>
<p>"Lord, it's hot," said the dentist, finally, wiping his forehead with the
back of his hand. Marcus ground his teeth.</p>
<p>"Done for," he muttered; "done for."</p>
<p>"I never WAS so thirsty," continued McTeague. "I'm that dry I can hear my
tongue rubbing against the roof of my mouth."</p>
<p>"Well, we can't stop here," said Marcus, finally; "we got to go somewhere.
We'll try and get back, but it ain't no manner of use. Anything we want to
take along with us from the mule? We can——"</p>
<p>Suddenly he paused. In an instant the eyes of the two doomed men had met
as the same thought simultaneously rose in their minds. The canvas sack
with its five thousand dollars was still tied to the horn of the saddle.</p>
<p>Marcus had emptied his revolver at the mule, and though he still wore his
cartridge belt, he was for the moment as unarmed as McTeague.</p>
<p>"I guess," began McTeague coming forward a step, "I guess, even if we are
done for, I'll take—some of my truck along."</p>
<p>"Hold on," exclaimed Marcus, with rising aggressiveness. "Let's talk about
that. I ain't so sure about who that—who that money belongs to."</p>
<p>"Well, I AM, you see," growled the dentist.</p>
<p>The old enmity between the two men, their ancient hate, was flaming up
again.</p>
<p>"Don't try an' load that gun either," cried McTeague, fixing Marcus with
his little eyes.</p>
<p>"Then don't lay your finger on that sack," shouted the other. "You're my
prisoner, do you understand? You'll do as I say." Marcus had drawn the
handcuffs from his pocket, and stood ready with his revolver held as a
club. "You soldiered me out of that money once, and played me for a
sucker, an' it's my turn now. Don't you lay your finger on that sack."</p>
<p>Marcus barred McTeague's way, white with passion. McTeague did not answer.
His eyes drew to two fine, twinkling points, and his enormous hands
knotted themselves into fists, hard as wooden mallets. He moved a step
nearer to Marcus, then another.</p>
<p>Suddenly the men grappled, and in another instant were rolling and
struggling upon the hot white ground. McTeague thrust Marcus backward
until he tripped and fell over the body of the dead mule. The little bird
cage broke from the saddle with the violence of their fall, and rolled out
upon the ground, the flour-bags slipping from it. McTeague tore the
revolver from Marcus's grip and struck out with it blindly. Clouds of
alkali dust, fine and pungent, enveloped the two fighting men, all but
strangling them.</p>
<p>McTeague did not know how he killed his enemy, but all at once Marcus grew
still beneath his blows. Then there was a sudden last return of energy.
McTeague's right wrist was caught, something licked upon it, then the
struggling body fell limp and motionless with a long breath.</p>
<p>As McTeague rose to his feet, he felt a pull at his right wrist; something
held it fast. Looking down, he saw that Marcus in that last struggle had
found strength to handcuff their wrists together. Marcus was dead now;
McTeague was locked to the body. All about him, vast interminable,
stretched the measureless leagues of Death Valley.</p>
<p>McTeague remained stupidly looking around him, now at the distant horizon,
now at the ground, now at the half-dead canary chittering feebly in its
little gilt prison.</p>
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