The Bells of San Juan. Jackson Gregory. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Jackson Gregory
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066243067
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      "Yes," said Galloway.

      "The Kid there did it?"

      For the first time the man slouching forward in the chair lifted his head. Had a stranger looked in at that moment, curious to see him who had just committed homicide … or murder … he must have experienced a positive shock. Sullen-eyed, sullen-lipped, the man-killer could not yet have seen the last of his teens. A thin wisp of straw-colored hair across a low, atavistic forehead, unhealthy, yellowish skin, with pale, lack-lustre, faded blue eyes, he looked evil and vicious and cruel. One looking from him to Jim Galloway would have suspected that one could be as inhuman as the other, but with the difference that that which was but means to an end with Galloway would be end in itself to Kid Rickard. Something of the primal savage shone in the pale fires of his eyes.

      "Yes," retorted the Kid, his surly voice little better than a snarl. "I got him and be damned to him!"

      "Bad luck cursing a dead man, Rickard," said Norton coldly. "What did you kill him for?"

      Kid Rickard's tongue ran back and forth between his colorless lips before he replied.

      "He tried to get me first," he said defiantly.

      "Who saw the shooting?"

      "Jim Galloway. And Antone."

      Rod Norton grunted his disgust with the situation.

      "Give me your gun," he commanded tersely.

      The Kid frowned. Galloway cleared his throat. Rickard's eyes went to him swiftly. Then he got to his feet, jerked a thirty-eight-caliber revolver from the hip pocket of his overalls and held it out, surrendering it reluctantly. Norton "broke" it, ejecting the cartridges into his palm. Not an empty shell among them; the Kid had slipped in a fresh shell for every exploded one.

      "How many times did you shoot?"

      "I don't know. Two or three, I guess. … Damn it, do you imagine a man counts 'em?"

      "What were you and Galloway doing alone in here with the door locked?"

      Galloway cut in sharply:

      "I didn't want any more trouble; I was afraid somebody … "

      "Shut up, will you?" cried the sheriff fiercely. "I'll give you all the chance you want to talk pretty soon. Answer me, Rickard."

      "I told him to lock me up somewhere until you or Tom Cutter come," said the Kid slowly. "I was afraid somebody might jump me for what I done. I didn't want no more trouble."

      Norton turned briefly to the crowded room behind him.

      "Anybody know where Cutter is?" he asked.

      It appeared that every one knew. Tom Cutter, Rod Norton's deputy, had gone in the early morning to Mesa Verde, and would probably return in the cool of the evening. Frowning, Norton made the best of the situation, and to gain his purpose called four men out of the crowd.

      "I want you boys to do me a favor," he said.

      "Antone, come here."

      The short, squat half-breed standing behind the bar lifted his heavy black brows, demanding:

      "Y porqué? What am I to do?"

      "As you are told," Norton snapped at him. "Benny, you and Dick walk down the street with Antone; you other boys walk down the other way with Rickard. If they haven't had all the chance to talk together already that they want, don't give them any more opportunity. Step up, Rickard."

      The Kid sulked, but under the look the sheriff turned on him came forward and went out, his whole attitude remaining one of defiance. Antone, his swart face as expressionless as a piece of mahogany, hesitated, glanced at Galloway, shrugged, and did as Rickard had done, going out between his two guards. The men remaining in the barroom were watching their sheriff expectantly. He swung about upon Galloway.

      "Now," he said quickly, "who fired the first shot. Galloway?"

      Galloway smiled, went to his bar, poured himself a glass of whiskey, and standing there, the glass twisting slowly in his fingers, stared back innocently at his interrogator.

      "Trying the case already, Judge Norton?" he inquired equably.

      "Will you answer?" Norton said coolly.

      "Sure." Galloway kept his look steady upon the sheriff's, and into the innocence of his eyes there came a veiled insolence. "Bisbee shot first."

      "Where was he standing?"

      Galloway pointed.

      "Right there." The spot indicated was about three or four feet from where Norton stood, near the second card-room door.

      "Where was the Kid?"

      "Over there." Again Galloway pointed. "Clean across the room, where the chair is tumbled over against the table."

      "How many times did Bisbee shoot?"

      Galloway seemed to be trying to remember. He drank his whiskey slowly, reached over the bar for a cigar, and answered:

      "Twice or three times."

      "How many times did Rickard shoot?"

      "I'm not sure. I'd say about the same; two or three times."

      "Where was Antone standing?"

      "Behind the bar; down at the far end, nearest the door."

      "Where were you?"

      "Leaning against the bar, talking to Antone."

      "What were you talking about?"

      This question came quicker, sharper than the others, as though calculated to startle Galloway into a quick answer. But the proprietor of the Casa Blanca was lighting his cigar and took his time. When he looked up, his eyes told Norton that he had understood any danger which might lie under a question so simple in the seeming. His eyes were smiling contemptuously, but there was a faint flush in his cheeks.

      "I don't remember," he replied at last. "Some trifle. The shooting, coming suddenly that way …

      "What started the ruction?"

      "Bisbee had been drinking a little. He seemed to be in the devil's own temper. He had asked the Kid to have a drink with him, and Rickard refused. He had his drink alone and then invited the Kid again. Rickard told him to go to hell. Bisbee started to walk across the room as though he was going to the card-room. Then he grabbed his gun and whirled and started shooting."

      "Missing every time, of course?"

      Galloway nodded.

      "You'll remember I said he was carrying enough of a load to make his aim bad."

      Norton asked half a dozen further questions and then said abruptly:

      "That's all. As you go out will you tell the boys to send Antone in?"

      Again a hint of color crept slowly, dully, into Galloway's cheeks.

      "You're going pretty far, Rod Norton," he said tonelessly.

      "You're damned right I am!" cried Norton ringingly. "And I am going a lot further, Jim Galloway, before I get through, and you can bet all of your blue chips on it. I want Antone in here and I want you outside! Do I get what I want or not?"

      Galloway stood motionless, his cigar clamped tight in his big square teeth. Then he shrugged and went to the door.

      "If I am standing a good deal off of you," he muttered, hanging on his heel just before he passed out, "it's because I am as strong as any man in the county to see the law brought into San Juan. And"--for the first time yielding outwardly to a display of the emotion riding him, he spat out venomously and tauntingly--"and we'd have had the law here long ago had we had a couple of men in the boots of the Nortons, father and son!"

      Rod Norton's face went a flaming red with anger, his hand grew white upon