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The Young Engineers in Arizona, a novel by H. Irving Hancock |
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Chapter 14. The Council Of The Curb |
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_ CHAPTER XIV. THE COUNCIL OF THE CURB "How soon are you going to carry out your plans?" Reade demanded. "Then you won't leave Paloma?" "I certainly won't--as far as my own decision goes," Reade replied firmly. "Furthermore, I should feel the utmost contempt for myself if I allowed you to drive me away from here before my work is completed." "You're a fool!" hissed Duff. "And you're a gambler," Tom shot back. "If you won't change your trade, why should you expect me to change mine?" "I reckon, gentlemen," said Duff, turning to the others present, "that there's no use in wasting any more time with this fellow. He'd rather be hanged to a tree than take good advice. If the rest of you agree with me, I propose that we take the cub to his tree at once." Several spoke in favor of this plan. Tom, seeing this, felt his heart sink somewhat within him, though he was no more inclined than before to accede to the demands of the rascals. "Grab him! Throw him down; tie and gag him," were the gambler's orders. Two men nearest the young engineer sprang at him. "We'll play this game right through to the finish, then!" burst from Tom's lips, and there was something like fury in his voice. Biff! Thump! Two of the townsmen of Paloma, wholly unprepared for resistance, went down before the engineer's telling blows. "Your turn, Duff!" rumbled Reade's voice, as he sprang forward and launched a terrific blow at the gambler. Duff went down, almost doubling up as he struck. He had been hit squarely on the jaw with a force that made even Tom Reade's hardened knuckles ache. "Shoot him!" rose a snarl, as others moved toward the boy. "All right!" assented Tom, his voice ringing cheerily despite his anger. "Be cowards, as comes natural to you. Yet, if you have the courage of real men I'll agree to fight my way out of this place, meeting you one at a time." "What's that noise up in the street?" suddenly demanded Ashby, in a tone of sudden fear. "Run up and find out, if you want to know," proposed Tom, who stood poised, ready for another assailant to come within reach of his fists. Stealthily, on tip-toe, the bully who had first engaged Reade in the street fight, was now trying to get up behind the young engineer. The bully held the shotgun ready to bring down on the lad's head. "There's some row up there," continued Ashby. "There, I heard shots!" "Brave, aren't you?" jeered Tom. Three or four of the masked cowards started for the steep stairway. Even the bully with the clubbed shotgun must have been seized with fear; for, though in position to strike, he quickly lowered the weapon and listened. Bump! smash! sounded, though not directly overhead. Then from the hallway above came the noise of the treading of many feet, while a voice roared hoarsely: "Spread through the house, boys! If they've done anything to Mr. Reade, then break the necks of every white-livered rascal you can find!" "Fine!" chuckled Tom, while the masked faces in the cellar turned even whiter than the cloths covering them. "That voice sounds familiar to me, too." Over the hubbub of voices above sounded some remonstrating tones, as though others were urging a less violent course. "It's the workmen from the camp!" guessed Hotelman Ashby, in a voice that shook as though from ague. "Sounds like it," chuckled Tom. "Cheer up, Ashby. If it's our railroad crew I'll try to see to it that they don't do more than half kill you!" Then, raising his voice, Tom called gleefully: "Hello, there! You'll find us in the cellar." "Why don't you kill that fool!" muttered Jim Duff, who, still dazed, struggled to sit up. "Hush, man, for goodness sake!" implored the badly frightened Ashby. Duff, with rapidly returning consciousness, now leaped to his feet, drawing his pistol and springing at Reade. "Hold on!" Tom proposed coolly. "You're too late!" The sudden flooding of light into the place and the rush of hobnailed shoes on the stairs recalled even the gambler's scattered senses. "There they are!" yelled a voice. "Grab 'em! Be careful you don't hit Mr. Reade." In another instant the cellar was the center of a wild scene. Railway laborers flooded the little place. While some held dark lanterns that threw a bright glow over the scene, others leaped upon the masked ones, tearing the cloths from their faces. "Serve 'em hot!" roared the same rough voice. "Stop!" commanded Tom Reade, leaping forward where the light was brightest and into the thick of the struggling mass of humanity. "Stop, I tell you!" His commands fell upon deaf ears. It was impossible to restrain these men. Here and there the lately masked men drew pistols, though not one of them had a chance to use his weapon ere it was wrested from him. Pound! slam! bang! A medley of falling blows filled the air, nor was it many seconds later when cries of pain and fear, and appeals for mercy were heard on all sides. Tom had recognized his own railroad workers, and was throwing himself among them, doing his utmost with hands and voice to stop the brief but wild orgy of revenge on the part of the workmen who idolized him. In their present rage, however, Tom could not at once restrain them. Time and again he was swept back from reaching Tim Griggs, who was easily the center of this volcanic outburst of human passion. "Boys!" roared Tim. "We'll want to know these coyotes to-morrow. Black the left eye of each rascal. I'll black both of Jim Duff's." Two heavy, sodden impacts sounded during a brief pause in the noise, attesting to the fact that the gambler had been decorated. "Stop all this! Stop!" roared Tom Reade. "Men, we're not savages, just because these other fellows happen to be! Stop it, I tell you. Are there no foremen here?" "I'm trying to reach you, Mr. Reade," called the voice of Superintendent Hawkins. "But this is a heavy crush to get through." In truth it was. There were more than a hundred laborers in the cellar, while the stairs were blocked by a mob of enraged workmen. "Stop it all, men!" Tom again urged, and this time there was silence, save for his own strong voice. "We don't want to prove ourselves to be as despicable as the enemy are. Bring 'em up to the street, but don't be brutal about it. We'll look the scoundrels over so that we'll know them to-morrow. Come along. Clear the stairs, if you please, men!" Tom was now once more in control, as fully as though he had his force of toilers out on the desert at the Man-killer quicksand. So, after a few minutes, all were in the street. Here fully two hundred more of the railroad men, many of them armed with stakes and other crude weapons, held back a crowd of Paloma residents who swarmed curiously about. "Let me through, men. Let me through, I tell you!" insisted the voice of Harry Hazelton, as that young assistant engineer struggled with the crowd. Then, on being recognized, Harry was allowed to reach the side of his chum. "Mr. Reade!" called a husky-toned voice, "won't you order your men to let me through to see you? I want to talk with you about tonight's outrage." Tom recognized the speaker as a man named Beasley, one of Paloma's most upright and courageous citizens. "Let Mr. Beasley through," Tom called. "Don't block the streets, men. Remember, we've no right to do that." A resounding cheer ascended at the sound of Tom's voice. In the light of the lanterns Tom was seen to be signaling with his hands for quiet, and the din soon died down. "Mr. Reade," spoke Beasley, in a voice that shook with indignation, "the real men of this town would like an account of what has been going on here to-night. If Duff and his cronies have been up to anything that hurts the good name of the town we'd like the full particulars. You men there--don't let one of the rascals get away. Jim Duff and his gang will have to answer to the town of Paloma." "Men," ordered Reade, "bring along the crew you caught in the cellar. Don't hurt them--remember how cowardly violence would be when we have everything in our own hands." "The men of Paloma will do all the hurting," Mr. Beasley announced grimly. Tom's own deliberate manner, and his manifest intention of not abusing his advantage impressed itself upon the decent men of Paloma, who now swarmed about the frightened captives from the cellar. "I know 'em all," muttered Beasley. "I'll know 'em in the morning, too. So will you, friends!" he added, turning to the pressing crowds. "Start Jim Duff on his travels now!" demanded one angry voice. "By the Tree & Rope Short Line!" proposed another voice. Jim was caught and held, despite his straggles. Active hands swarmed over his clothing, seeking for weapons. "Gentlemen! Gentlemen!" appealed Tom sturdily, making his resonant voice travel far over the heads of the throng. "Will you honor me with your attention for three or four minutes?" "Yep!" shouted back one voice. "You bet!" came another voice. "Go ahead and spout, Reade. We'll have the hanging, right after!" There was nothing jovial in these responses. Tom Reade knew men well enough to recognize this fact. Moreover, Tom knew the plain, unvarnished, honest and deadly-in-earnest men of these south-western plains well enough to know the genuine fury of the crowd. Arizona and New Mexico have long been held up as states where violence and lynch law prevail. The truth is that Arizona and New Mexico have no more lynchings than do many of the older states. An Arizona lynching can only follow an upheaval of public sentiment, when honest men are angered at having their fair fame sullied by the acts of blackguards. "Friends," Tom went on, as soon as he could secure silence, "I am a newcomer among you. I have no right to tell you how to conduct your affairs, and I am not going to make that mistake. What you may do with Jim Duff, what you may do with others who damage the fair name of your town, is none of my business. For myself I want no revenge on these rascals. They have already been handled with much more roughness than they had time to show to me. I am satisfied to call the matter even." "But we're not!" shouted an Arizona voice from the crowd. "That's your own affair, gentlemen," Reade went on. "I wish to suggest--in fact, I beg of you--that you let these fellows go to-night. In the morning, when the sun is up, and after you have thought over the matter, you will be in a better position to give these fellows fair-minded justice--if you then still feel that something must be done to them. That is all I have to say, gentlemen. Now, Mr. Beasley, won't you follow with further remarks in this same line?" Mr. Beasley looked more or less reluctant, but he presently complied with Reade's request. Then Tom called upon another prominent citizen of Paloma in the crowd for a speech. "Let the coyotes go--until daylight," was the final verdict of the crowd, though there was an ominous note in the expressed decision. In stony silence the crowd now parted to let Jim Duff and his fellows go away. Within sixty seconds the last of them had run the gauntlet of contempt and vanished. "Someone told me," scoffed Beasley, "that a gambler is a man of courage, polish, brains and good manners. I reckon Jim Duff isn't a real gambler, then." "Yes, he is!" shouted another. "He's one of the real kind--sometimes smooth, but always bound to fatten on the money that belongs to other men." "Jim can leave town, I reckon," grimly declared another old settler. "We have savings banks these days, and we don't need gamblers to carry our money for us." "Speech, Reade! Speech!" insisted Mr. Beasley good-humoredly. From some mysterious place a barrel was passed along from hand to hand. It was set down before the young chief engineer, and ready hands hoisted him to the upturned end of the barrel. "Speech!" roared a thousand voices. Tom, grinning good-humoredly, then waved his arms as though to still the tumult of voices. Gradually the cheering died down, then ceased. Bang! sounded further down the Street, and the flash of a rifle was seen. Tom Reade, his speech unmade, fell from the barrel into the arms of those crowded about him. _ |