Oh, You Tex!
CHAPTER XXXIII
THE MAN WITH THE YELLOW STREAK
Night fell on both a dry and fireless camp for the outlaws who had triedto rob the Clarendon-Tascosa stage. They had covered a scant twentymiles instead of the eighty they should have put behind them. For DaveOverstreet had been literally dying in the saddle every step of the way.
He had clenched his teeth and clung to the pommel desperately. Once hehad fainted and slid from his seat. But the bandits could not stop andcamp, though Dinsmore kept the pace to a walk.
"Once we reach Palo Duro, we'll hole up among the rocks an' fix you upfine, Dave," his companion kept promising.
"Sure, Homer. I'm doin' dandy," the wounded man would answer from white,bloodless lips.
The yellow streak in Gurley was to the fore all day. It evidenced itselfin his precipitate retreat from the field of battle--a flight whichcarried him miles across the desert before he dared wait for hiscomrades. It showed again in the proposal which he made early in theafternoon to Dinsmore.
The trio of outlaws had been moving very slowly on account of thesuffering of the wounded man. Gurley kept looking back nervously everyfew minutes to see if pursuers were visible. After a time he sidled upto Dinsmore and spoke low.
"They'll get us sure if we don't move livelier, Homer."
"How in Mexico can we move faster when Dave can't stand it?" askedDinsmore impatiently.
"He's a mighty sick man. He hadn't ought to be on horseback at all. Heneeds a doctor."
"Will you go an' get him one?" demanded Homer with sour sarcasm.
"What I say is, let's fix him up comfortable, an' after a while mebbe aposse will come along an' pick him up. They can look after him betterthan we got a chance to do," argued Gurley.
"And mebbe a posse won't find him--what then?" rasped Dinsmore.
"They will. If they don't, he'll die easy. This is sure enough hell forhim now."
"All right. Shall we stop right here with him?"
"That wouldn't do any good, Homer. The Rangers would get us too."
"I see. Yore idea is to let Dave die easy while we're savin' our hides.Steve, you've got a streak in you a foot wide."
"Nothin' like that," protested the man with the eyes that didn't track."I'd stay by him if it was any use. But it ain't. Whyfor should you an'me stretch a rope when we can't help Dave a mite? It ain't reasonable."
Overstreet could not hear what was said, but he guessed the tenor oftheir talk. "Go ahead, boys, an' leave me. I'm about done anyhow," hesaid.
"If Gurley has a mind to go, he can. I'll stick," answered Dinsmoregruffly.
But Gurley did not want to go alone. There were possible dangers to befaced that two men could meet a good deal more safely than one. It mightbe that they would have to stand off a posse. They might meet Indians.The sallow outlaw felt that he could not afford just now to break withhis companion. It was not likely that the Rangers would reach them thatnight, and he guessed craftily that Overstreet would not live tillmorning. The wound was a very serious one. The man had traveled milesbefore Dinsmore could stop to give him such slight first aid as waspossible, and the jolting of the long horseback ride had made itdifficult to stop the bleeding which broke out again and again.
After Dinsmore had eased the wounded man from his horse at dusk and laidhim on a blanket with a saddle for a pillow, Overstreet smiled faintlyup at him.
"It won't be for long, Homer. You'll be shet of me right soon now," hemurmured.
"Don't you talk that-a-way, Dave. I don't want to be shet of you. After agood night's rest you'll feel a new man."
"No, I've got more than I can pack. It won't be long now. I'm rightcomfortable here. Steve's in a hurry. You go on an' hit the trail withhim."
"Where did you get the notion I was yellow, old-timer? I've hunted incouples with you for years. Do you reckon I'm goin' to run like a curnow you've struck a streak o' bad luck?" asked Dinsmore huskily.
The dying man smiled his thanks. "You always was a stubbornson-of-a-gun, Homer. But Steve, he wants--"
"Steve can go to--Hell Creek, if he's so set on travelin' in a hurry.Here, drink some of this water."
The blanket of darkness fell over the land. Stars came out, at first oneor two, then by thousands, till the night was full of them. The woundedman dozed and stirred and dozed again. It was plain that the sands ofhis life were running low. Dinsmore, watching beside him, knew that itwas the ebb tide.
A little after midnight Overstreet roused himself, recognized thewatcher, and nodded good-bye.
"So long, Homer. I'm hittin' the home trail now."
His hand groped feebly till it found that of his friend. A few minuteslater he died, still holding the strong warm hand of the man who wasnursing him.
Dinsmore crossed the hands of the dead outlaw and covered him with ablanket.
"Saddle up, Steve," he told Gurley.
While he waited for the horses, he looked down with a blur over hiseyes. He had ridden hard and crooked trails all his life, but he hadlost that day his brother and his best friend. The three of them hadbeen miscreants. They had broken the laws of society and had foughtagainst it because of the evil in them that had made them a destructiveforce. But they had always played fair with each other. They had atleast been loyal to their own bad code. Now he was alone, for Gurley didnot count.
Presently the other man stood at his elbow with the saddled horses.Dinsmore swung to the saddle and rode away. Not once did he look back,but he had no answer for Gurley's cheerful prediction that now theywould reach Palo Duro Canon all right and would hole up there till thepursuit had spent itself, after which they could amble down across theline to Old Mexico or could strike the Pecos and join Billy the Kid.Only one idea was fixed definitely in his mind, that as soon as hecould, he would part company with the man riding beside him.
When day came, it found them riding westward in the direction of DeafSmith County. The Canon was not far south of them, but there was no needof plunging into it yet. The pursuit must be hours behind them, even iftheir trail had not been lost altogether. They rode easily, prepared tocamp at the first stream or water-hole they reached.
"We'll throw off here," Dinsmore decided at the first brook theyreached.
They unsaddled and hobbled their horses. While Gurley lighted a fire forthe coffee, the other man strolled up the creek to get a shot at anysmall game he might find. Presently a brace of prairie-chickens rosewith a whir of wings. The rifle cracked, and one of them fell flutteringto the ground. Dinsmore moved forward to pick up the bird.
Abruptly he stopped in his stride. He fancied he heard a faint cry. Itcame again, carried on the light morning breeze. He could have swornthat it was the call of a woman for help.
Dinsmore grew wary. He knew the tricks of the Indians, the wily wayswith which they lured men into ambush. There had been rumors for daysthat the Indians were out again. Yet it was not like Indians to announcetheir presence before they pounced upon their prey. He moved very slowlyforward under cover of the brush along the bed of the stream.
The voice came to him again, closer this time, and in spite of thedistance clear as a bell. It was surely that of a white woman introuble. Still he did not answer as he crept forward up the stream.
Then he caught sight of her--a girl, slim and young, stumbling forwardthrough the grass, exhaustion showing in every line of the body.
She stretched out her hands to him across the space between, with alittle despairing cry.