CHAPTER 6
The bed on which Bull Hunter reposed his bulk that night was not the cot to
which he was shown by his host. One glance at the spindling wooden legs of the
canvas-bottomed cot was enough for Bull, and having wrapped himself in the
covers he lay down on the floor and was instantly asleep.
While it was still dark, he wakened out of a dream in which Pete Reeve seemed to
be riding far--far away on the rim of the world. Ten minutes later Bull was on
the trail out of Johnstown. There was only one trail for a horseman south of
Johnstown, and that trail followed the windings of the valley. Bull planned to
push across the ragged peaks of the Little Cloudy Mountains and head off the
fugitive at Glenn Crossing.
Two days of stern labor went into the next burst. He followed the cold stars by
night and the easy landmarks by day, and for food he had the stock of raisins he
had bought at Johnstown. He came out of the heights and dropped down into Glenn
Crossing in the gloom of the second evening. But raisins are meager support for
such a bulk as that of Bull Hunter. It was a gaunt-faced giant who looked in at
the door of the shop where the blacksmith was working late. The mechanic looked
up with a start at the deep voice of the stranger, but he managed to stammer
forth his tidings. Such a man as Pete Reeve had indeed been in Glenn Crossing,
but he had gone on at the very verge of day and night.
Bull Hunter set his teeth, for there was no longer a possibility of cutting off
Pete Reeve by crossing country. The immense labors of the last three days had
merely served to put him on the heels of the horseman, and now he must follow
straight down country and attempt to match his long legs against the speed of a
fine horse. He drew a deep breath and plunged into the night out of Glenn
Crossing, on the south trail. At least he would make one short, stiff march
before the weariness overtook him.
That weariness clouded his brain ten miles out. He built a fire in a cover of
pines and slept beside it. Before dawn he was up and out again. In the first
gray of the daylight he reached a little store at a crossroad, and here he
paused for breakfast. A tousled girl, rubbing the sleep out of her eyes, served
him in the kitchen. The first glimpse of the hollow cheeks and the unshaven face
of Bull Hunter quite awakened her. Bull could feel her watching him, as she
glided about the room. He sunk his head between his shoulders and glared down at
the table. No doubt she would begin to gibe at him before long. Most women did.
He prepared himself to meet with patience that incredible sting and penetrating
hurt of a woman's mockery.
But there was no mockery forthcoming. The sun was still not up when he paid his
bill and hastened to the door of the old building. Quick footsteps followed him,
a hand touched his shoulders, and he turned and looked suspiciously down into
the face of the girl. It was a frightened face, he thought, and very pretty. At
some interval between the time when he first saw her and the present, she had
found time to rearrange her hair and make it smooth. Color was pulsing in her
cheeks.
"Stranger," she said softly, "what are you running away from?"
The question slowly penetrated the mind of Bull; he was still bewildered by the
change in her--something electric, to be felt rather than noted with the eye.
"They ain't any reason for hurrying on," she urged. "I--I can hide you, easy.
Nobody could find where I'll put you, and there you can rest up. You must be
tolerable tired."
There was no doubt about it. There was kindness as well as anxiety in her voice.
For the second time in his entire life, Bull decided that a woman could be
something more than an annoyance. She was placing a value on him, just as
Jessie, three days before, had placed a value on him; and it disturbed Bull. For
so many years, he had been mocked and scorned by his uncle and cousins that deep
in his mind was engraved the certainty that he was useless. He decided to hurry
on before the girl found out the truth.
"I can still walk," he said, "and, while I can walk, I got to go south. But--you
gimme heart, lady. You gimme a pile of heart to keep going. Maybe"--he paused,
uncertain what to say next, and yet obviously she expected something more--"I'll
get a chance to come back this way, and if I do, I'll see you! You can lay to
that--I'll see you!"
He was gone before she could answer, and he was wondering why she had looked
down with that sudden color and that queer, pleased smile. It would be long
before Bull understood, but, even without understanding, he found that his heart
was lighter and an odd warmth suffused him.
The rising of the sun found him in the pale desert with the magic of the hills
growing distant behind him, and he settled to a different step through the thin
sand--a short, choppy step. His weight was against him here, but it would be
even a greater disadvantage to a horseman, and with this in mind, he pressed
steadily south.
Every day on that south trail was like a year in the life of Bull. Heat and
thirst wasted him, the constant labor of the march hardened his muscles, and he
got that forward look about his eyes, which comes with shadows under the lids
and a constant frown on the forehead. It was long afterward that men checked up
his march from date to date and discovered that the distance between the shack
of Bill Campbell and Halstead in the South was one hundred and fifty miles over
bitter mountains and burning desert, and that Bull Hunter had made the distance
in five days.
All this was learned and verified later when Bull was a legend. When he strode
into Halstead on that late afternoon no one had ever heard of the man out of the
mountains. He was simply an oddity in a country where oddities draw small
attention.
Yet a rumor advanced before Bull. A child, playing in the incredible heat of the
sun, saw the dusty giant heaving in the distance and ran to its mother,
frightened, and the worn-faced mother came to the porch and shaded her eyes to
look. She passed on the word with a call that traveled from house to house. So
that, when Bull entered the long, irregular street of Halstead, he found it
lined on either side by children, old men, women. It was almost as though they
had heard of the thing he had come to do and were there to watch.
Bull shrank from their eyes. He would far rather have slipped around the back of
the village and gone toward its center unobserved. A pair of staring eyes to
Bull was like the pointing of a loaded gun. He put unspoken sentences upon every
tongue, and the sentences were those he had heard so often from his uncle and
his uncle's sons.
"Too big to be any good."
"Bull's got the size of a hoss, and as a hoss he'd do pretty well, but he ain't
no account as a man."
His life had been paved with such burning remarks as these. Many an evening had
been long agony to him as the three sat about and baited him. He hurried down
the street, the pulverized sand squirting up about his heavy boots and drifting
in a mist behind him. When he was gone an old man came out and measured those
great strides with his eye and then stretched his legs vainly to cover the same
marks. But this, of course, Bull did not see, and he would not have understood
it, had he seen, except as a mockery.
He paused in front of the hotel veranda, an awful figure to behold. His canvas
coat was rolled and tied behind his sweating shoulders; his too-short sleeves
had bothered him and they were now cut off at the elbow and exposed the
sun-blackened forearms; his overalls streamed in rags over his scarred boots. He
pushed the battered hat far back on his head and looked at the silent, attentive
line of idlers who sat on the veranda.
"Excuse me, gents," he said mildly. "But maybe one of you might know of a little
gent with iron-gray hair and a thin face and quick ways of acting and little,
thin hands." He illustrated his meaning by extending his own huge paws. "His
name is Pete Reeve."
That name caused a sharp shifting of glances, not at Bull, but from man to man.
A tall fellow rose. He advanced with his thumbs hooked importantly in the arm
holes of his vest and braced his legs apart as he faced Bull. The elevation of
the veranda floor raised him so that he was actually some inches above the head
of his interlocutor, and the tall man was deeply grateful for that advantage. He
was, in truth, a little vain of his own height, and to have to look up to anyone
irritated him beyond words. Having established his own superior position, he
looked the giant over from head to foot. He kept one eye steadily on Bull, as
though afraid that the big man might dodge out of sight and elude him.
"And what might you have to do with Pete Reeve?" he asked. "Mightn't you be a
partner of Pete's? Kind of looks like you was following him sort of eager,
friend."
While this question was being asked, Bull saw that the line of idlers settled
forward in their chairs to hear the answer. It puzzled him. For some mysterious
reason these men disapproved of any one who was intimately acquainted with Pete
Reeve, it seemed. He looked blandly upon the tall man.
"I never seen Pete Reeve," said Bull apologetically.
"Ah? Yet you're follerin' him hotfoot?"
"I was aiming to see him, you know," answered Bull.
The tall man regarded him with eyes that began to twinkle beneath his frown.
Then he jerked his head aside and cast at his audience a prodigious wink. The
cloudy eyes of Bull had assured him that he had to do with a simpleton, and he
was inviting the others in on the game.
"You never seen him?" he asked gruffly, turning back to Bull. "You expect me to
believe talk like that? Young man, d'you know who I am?"
"I dunno," murmured Bull, overawed and drawing back a pace.
The action drew a chuckle from the crowd. Some of the idlers even rose and
sauntered to the edge of the veranda, the better to see the baiting of the
giant. His prodigious size made his timidity the more amusing.
"You dunno, eh?" asked the other. "Well, son, I'm Sheriff Bill Anderson!" He
waited to see the effect of this portentous announcement.
"I never heard tell of any Sheriff Bill Anderson," said Bull in the same mild
voice.
The sheriff gasped. The idlers hastily veiled their mouths with much coughing
and clearing of the throat. It seemed that the tables had been subtly turned
upon the sheriff.
"You!" exclaimed the sheriff, extending a bony arm. "I got to tell you, partner,
that I'm a pile suspicious. I'm suspicious of anybody that's a friend of Pete
Reeve. How long have you knowed him?"
Bull was very anxious to pacify the tall man. He shifted his weight to the other
foot. "Something less'n nothing," he hastened to explain. "I ain't never seen
him."
"And why d'you want to see him? What d'you know about him?"
It flashed through the mind of Bull that it would be useless to tell what he
knew of Pete. Obviously nobody would believe what he could tell of how Reeve had
met and shot down Uncle Bill Campbell. For Bill Campbell was a historic figure
as a fighter in the mountain regions, and surely his face must be bright even at
this distance from his home. That he could have walked beyond the sphere of
Campbell's fame in five days never occurred to Bull Hunter.
"I dunno nothing good," he confessed.
There was a change in the sheriff. He descended from the floor of the veranda
with a stiff-legged hop and took Bull by the arm, leading him down the street.
"Son," he said earnestly, walking down the street with Bull, "d'you know
anything agin' this Pete Reeve? I want to know because I got Pete behind the
bars for murder!"
"Murder?" asked Bull.
"Murder--regular murder--something he'll hang for. And if you got any inside
information that I can use agin' him, why I'll use it and I'll be mighty
grateful for it! You see everybody knows Pete Reeve. Everybody knows that, for
all these years, he's been going around killing and maiming men, and nobody has
been able to bring him up for anything worse'n self-defense. But now I think I
got him to rights, and I want to hang him for it, stranger, partly because it'd
be a feather in my cap, and partly because it'd be doing a favor for every good,
law-abiding citizen in these parts. So do what you can to help me, stranger, and
I'll see that your time ain't wasted."
There was something very wheedling and insinuating about all this talk. It
troubled Bull. His strangely obscure life had left him a child in many important
respects, and he had a child's instinctive knowledge of the mental processes of
others. In this case he felt a profound distrust. There was something wrong
about this sheriff, his instincts told him--something gravely wrong. He disliked
the man who had started to ridicule him before many men and was now so
confidential, asking his help.
"Sheriff Anderson," he said, "may I see this Reeve?"
"Come right along with me, son. I ain't pressing you for what you know. But it
may be a thing that'll help me to hang Reeve. And if it is, I'll need to know
it. Understand? Public benefit--that's what I'm after. Come along with me and
you can see if Reeve's the man you're after."
They crossed the street through a little maelstrom of fine dust which a wind
circle had picked up, and the sheriff led Bull into the jail. They crossed the
tawdry little outer room with its warped floor creaking under the tread of Bull
Hunter. Next they came face to face with a cage of steel bars, and behind it was
a little gray man on a bunk. He sat up and peered at them from beneath bushy
brows, a thin-faced man, extremely agile. Even in sitting up, one caught many
possibilities of catlike speed of action.
Bull knew at once that this was the man he sought. He stood close to the bars,
grasping one in each great hand, and with his face pressed against the steel, he
peered at Pete Reeve. The other was very calm.
"Howdy, sheriff," he said. "Bringing on another one to look over your bear?"