Home > Authors Index > William MacLeod Raine > Tangled Trails: A Western Detective Story > This page
Tangled Trails: A Western Detective Story, a novel by William MacLeod Raine |
||
Chapter 32. Jack Takes Off His Coat |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
Next > |
________________________________________________
_ CHAPTER XXXII. JACK TAKES OFF HIS COAT Afterward, when Kirby Lane looked back upon the weeks spent in Denver trying to clear up the mysteries which surrounded the whole affair of his uncle's death, it seemed to him that he had been at times incredibly stupid. Nowhere did this accent itself so much as in that part of the tangle which related to Esther McLean. From time to time Kirby saw Cole. He was in and out of town. Most of his time was spent running down faint trails which spun themselves out and became lost in the hills. The champion rough rider was indomitably resolute in his intention of finding her. There were times when Rose began to fear that her little sister was lost to her for always. But Sanborn never shared this feeling. "You wait. I'll find her," he promised. "An' if I can lay my hands on the man that's done her a meanness, I'll certainly give them hospital sharks a job patchin' him up." His gentle eyes had frozen, and the cold, hard light in them was almost deadly. Kirby could not get it out of his head that James was responsible for the disappearance of the girl. Yet he could not find a motive that would justify so much trouble on his cousin's part. He was at a moving-picture house on Curtis Street with Rose when the explanation popped into his mind. They were watching an old-fashioned melodrama in which the villain's letter is laid at the door of the unfortunate hero. Kirby leaned toward Rose in the darkness and whispered, "Let's go." "Go where?" she wanted to know in surprise. They had seated themselves not five minutes before. "I've got a hunch. Come." She rose, and on the way to the aisle brushed past several irritated ladies. Not till they were standing on the sidewalk outside did he tell her what was on his mind. "I want to see that note from my uncle you found in your sister's desk," he said. She looked at him and laughed a little. "You certainly want what you want when you want it! Do your hunches often take you like that--right out of a perfectly good show you've paid your money to see?" "We've made a mistake. It was seein' that fellow in the play that put me wise. Have you got the note with you?" "No. It's at home. If you like we'll go and get it." They walked up to the Pioneers' Monument and from there over to her boarding-place. Kirby looked the little note over carefully. "What a chump I was not to look at this before," he said. "My uncle never wrote it." "Never wrote it?" "Not his writin' a-tall." "Then whose is it?" "I can make a darn good guess. Can't you?" She looked at him, eyes dilated, on the verge of a discovery. "You mean--?" "I mean that J. C. might stand for at least two other men we know." "Your cousin James?" "More likely Jack." His mind beat back to fugitive memories of Jack's embarrassment when Esther's name had been mentioned in connection with his uncle. Swiftly his brain began to piece the bits of evidence he had not understood the meaning of before. "Jack's the man. You may depend on it. My uncle hadn't anything to do with it. We jumped at that conclusion too quick," he went on. "You think that she's . . . with him?" "No. She's likely out in the country or in some small town. He's havin' her looked after. Probably an attack of conscience. Even if he's selfish as the devil, he isn't heartless." "If we could be sure she's all right. But we can't." Rose turned on him a wistful face, twisted by emotion. "I want to find her, Kirby. I'm her sister. She's all I've got. Can't you do something?" "I'll try." She noticed the hardening of the lean jaw, the tightening of the muscles as the back teeth clenched. "Don't--don't do anything--rash," she begged. Her hand rested lightly on his arm. Their eyes met. He smiled grimly. "Don't worry. Mebbe I'll call you up later tonight and report progress." He walked to the nearest drug-store and used the telephone freely. At the end of fifteen minutes he stepped out of the booth. His cousin Jack was doing some evening work at the offices where he was now in charge of settling up his uncle's affairs. Kirby found him there. A man stenographer was putting on his coat to leave, but Jack was still at his desk. He looked up, annoyed. "Was that you telephoned me?" he asked. "Yes." "I told you I'd let you know when I wanted to see you." "So you did. But you didn't let me know. The shoe's on the other foot now. I want to see you." "I'm not interested in anything you have to say." The stenographer had gone. Kirby could hear his footsteps echoing down the corridor. He threw the catch of the lock and closed the door. "I can promise to keep you interested," he said, very quietly. Jack rose. He wore white shoes, duck trousers, a white pique shirt, and a blue serge coat that fitted his graceful figure perfectly. "What did you do that for?" he demanded. "Open that door!" "Not just yet, Jack. I've come for a settlement. It's up to you to say what kind of a one it'll be." Cunningham's dark eyes glittered. He was no physical coward. Moreover, he was a trained athlete, not long out of college. He had been the middle-weight champion boxer of the university. If this tough brown cousin wanted a set-to, he would not have to ask twice for it. "Suits me fine," he said. "What's your proposition?" "I've been a blind idiot. Didn't see what was right before my eyes. I reckon you've had some laughs at me. Well, I hope you enjoyed 'em. There aren't any more grins comin' to you." Kirby spoke coldly, implacably, his voice grating like steel on steel. "Meaning, in plain English?" "That you've let a dead man's shoulders carry your sins. You heard us blame Uncle James for Esther McLean's trouble. An' you never said a word to set us right. Yet you're the man, you damned scoundrel!" Jack went white to the lips, then flushed angrily. "You can't ever mind your own business, can you?" "I want just two things from you. The first is, to know where you've taken her; the second, to tell you that you're goin' to make this right an' see that you do it." "When you talk to me like that I've nothing to say. No man living can bully me." "You won't come through. Is that it?" "You may go to the devil for all of me." Their stormy eyes clashed. "The girl you took advantage of hasn't any brother," the Wyoming man said. "I'm electin' myself to that job for a while. If I can I'm goin' to whale the life outa you." Jack slipped out of his coat and tossed it on the desk. Even in that moment, while Kirby was concentrating for the attack, the rough rider found time to regret that so good-looking a youth, one so gallantly poised and so gracefully graceless, should be a black-hearted scamp. "Hop to it!" invited the college man. Under thick dark lashes his black eyes danced with excitement. Kirby lashed out with his right, hard and straight. His cousin ducked with the easy grace of a man who has spent many hours on a ballroom floor. The cattleman struck again. Jack caught the blow and deflected it, at the same time uppercutting swiftly for the chin. The counter landed flush on Kirby's cheek and flung him back to the wall. He grinned, and plunged again. A driving left caught him off balance and flung him from his feet. He was up again instantly, shaking his head to clear it of the dizziness that sang there. It came to him that he must use his brains against this expert boxer or suffer a knockout. He must wear Jack out, let him spend his strength in attack, watch for the chance that was bound to come if he could weather the storm long enough. Not at all loath, Jack took the offensive. He went to work coolly to put out his foe. He landed three for one, timing and placing his blows carefully to get the maximum effect. A second time Kirby hit the floor. Jack hoped he would stay down. The clubman was a little out of condition. He was beginning to breathe fast. His cousin had landed hard two or three times on the body. Back of each of these blows there had been a punishing force. Cunningham knew he had to win soon if at all. But Kirby had not the least intention of quitting. He was the tough product of wind and sun and hard work. He bored in and asked for more, still playing for his opponent's wind. Kirby knew he was the stronger man, in far better condition. He could afford to wait--and Jack could not. He killed the boxer's attacks with deadly counter-blows, moving in and out lithely as a cat. The rough rider landed close to the solar plexus. Jack winced and gave ground. Kirby's fist got home again. He crowded Jack, feeling that his man was weakening. Jack rallied for one last desperate set-to, hoping for a chance blow to knock Kirby out. He scored a dozen times. Lane gave ground, slowly, watchfully, guarding as best he could. Then his brown fist shot out and up. It moved scarcely six inches, straight for the college boxer's chin. Jack's knees sagged. He went down, rolled over, and lay still. Kirby found water and brought it back. Jack was sitting up, his back propped against the wall. He swallowed a gulp or two and splashed the rest on his face. "I'll say you can hit like the kick of a mule," he said. "If you'd been a reasonable human, I ought to have got you, at that. Don't you ever stay down?" Kirby could not repress a little smile. In spite of himself he felt a sneaking admiration for this insouciant youth who could take a beating like a sportsman. "You're some little mixer yourself," he said. "Thought I was, before I bumped into you. Say, gimme a hand up. I'm a bit groggy yet." Kirby helped him to his feet. The immaculate shirt and trousers were spattered with blood, mostly Kirby's. The young dandy looked at himself, and a humorous quirk twitched at the corner of his mouth. "Some scrap. Let's go into the lavatory and do some reconstruction work," he said. Side by side at adjoining washbowls, perfectly amicably, they repaired as far as possible the damages of war. Not till they had put on again their coats did Kirby hark back to the purpose of the meeting. "You haven't told me yet what I want to know." Out of a damaged eye Jack looked at him evenly. "And that's only part of it. I'm not going to, either." He had said the last word. Kirby could not begin all over again to thrash him. It was not reasonable. And if he did, he knew quite well he would get nothing out of the man. If he would not talk, he would not. The bronco buster walked back to his hotel. A special-delivery letter was in his box. It was postmarked Golden. As he handed it to him the clerk looked him over curiously. It had been some time since he had seen a face so badly cut up and swollen. "You ought to see the other fellow," Kirby told him with a lopsided grin as he ripped open the envelope. Before his eyes had traveled halfway down the sheet the cowman gave a modulated whoop of joy. "Good news?" asked the clerk. Kirby did not answer. His eyes were staring in blank astonishment at one sentence in the letter. The note was from Cole Sanborn. This is what Kirby read in it:
yours respectably COLE SANBORN P.S. Esther sends bushels of love to Rose and will write to-morrow. I'll say Im going to make her one happy kid. COLE
It was James Cunningham, not Jack. And, of course, Jack had known it all the time and been embarrassed by it. He had stuck loyally to his brother and had taken the whaling of his life rather than betray him. Kirby took off his hat to Jack. He had stood pat to a fighting finish. He was one good square sport. Even as he was thinking this, Kirby was moving toward the telephone booth. He had promised to report progress. For once he had considerable to report. _ |