Outlaw Ranch. Frank C. Robertson

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Outlaw Ranch - Frank C. Robertson

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think we know who they were,” the boy went on. “We think they were the two fellows you were with last night.”

      “I wouldn’t put it a-past ’em,” Chet nodded.

      “But somebody held them up and made ’em give our stuff back,” Bud volunteered. “He didn’t show himself, but we surely owe him a lot. I don’t know what we’d have done if we hadn’t got our money back.”

      “Well, I’m certainly glad yuh had such good luck,” Chet said warmly.

      “Know what my sister thinks? She thinks all three of them fellows are members of those Wild Ones we’ve heard so much about. She thinks that the one that made ’em give the money back thought it was too dirty a trick to rob us, and so he made his pals give it back. Yuh know they claim Kirk Holliday never robs poor people.”

      The boy leaned far over his pony’s withers, but he was watching the cattle buyer narrowly.

      “And maybe she’s wrong,” Chet contended quietly. “Maybe those two were just drunk enough to think it would be a good joke to scare you a little, an’ intended tuh give it back themselves in a little while.”

      The boy was frankly astonished.

      “You think that was how it was?” he asked eagerly. “They was drunk when they passed us. But Nevada says he’s dead sure they’re all three Wild Ones.”

      “I think that’s how it was,” Chet said. “But I think mebbe I’ve kinda got some track of yore brother. That’s why I wanted tuh talk with you this mornin’.”

      “You have? You know where Charley is? Gee, that’s great!”

      “Not so fast,” Chet remonstrated. “I’ve only got the slimmest kind of a clue. It may not be anything at all. Tell me, do you remember if your brother had a thin scar from the top of his nose over above his left eye?”

      “Yes, he did,” the boy said eagerly. “I remember about him having it the last time he came home. When we asked him how he got it he laughed and said he’d got it in a fight with one of Kirk Holliday’s Wild Ones.”

      “Then you’d heard about the Wild Ones before you came out here?”

      “Oh, yes. We’d read about ’em in the papers, and then Charley told us a lot more about their ways. But what else have you found out about Charley?” Bud demanded impatiently.

      “Not a thing,” Chet answered.

      They had now reached a point where he must turn off toward the corral, or else continue on to the Harrison camp. He was relieved when Bud insisted that he ride on to their camp.

      For some strange reason Chet found himself trembling at the prospect of talking with Leda Harrison. He wasn’t usually nervous in the presence of girls, for all that he seldom sought their society. The cold, impersonal look the girl gave him didn’t ease his self-consciousness to any extent.

      “Say, sis, Mr. Kelvin here knows something about Charley,” Bud announced excitedly.

      Leda looked up quickly, and her eyes sought the cattle buyer’s face with an unvoiced hope. Her expression quickly changed to one of suspicion.

      “You—you have met my brother?” she asked in a low voice.

      “I’m sorry to say I never have,” Chet said. “I’m a stranger in this country, like yourself. But after Bud told me about him, I made some inquiries from the two men I’m traveling with, after I found out they worked on this I X L outfit you say your brother owned.”

      Leda Harrison’s reticence disappeared before her intense desire to get information.

      “Those men work for the I X L, you say? And they know my brother?” she cried.

      “They claim to work for the I X L. Whether they do or not I can’t say, but they deny all knowledge of your brother.”

      “But the scar?” Bud put in.

      “One of them mentioned that when I was makin’ my inquiries, but the other man said the fellow who had such a scar was named Johnson,” Chet was compelled to admit.

      “Then—then you don’t know anything about my brother after all,” the girl said dismally.

      “But if those fellows work on the I X L they must have known Charley,” Bud argued.

      “Yes,” the girl said. “They must know what has happened to him. If—if—he has been done away with they must have had a hand in it. They are outlaws, I’m sure. I’m certain that the man who took our money last night was the fellow who offered me a drink from his whisky bottle.”

      “And the other cuss was the one who shot the heel off my boot,” Bud added.

      The boy lifted a brand-new boot and gazed ruefully at the place where the long, forward-jutting heel had been.

      “There does seem to be something queer about the business,” Chet admitted. “They say the I X L belongs to a man by the name of Adam Broome—a man well past sixty. Don’t you think it would be well if you had somebody else investigate for you, before you went down there?”

      All the girl’s latent suspicion flared anew.

      “Outlaws or not, I mean to find out for myself what happened to my brother,” she declared.

      “Hey, look out!” Chet yelled, pointing toward the fire. A pan of bacon on the coals had suddenly caught fire. Nevada was busy at the buckboard. Leda turned, and grasped the handle of the skillet in her bare hand. The handle was hot and she juggled it wildly for a minute from one hand to the other. Then, just as she had to let it go, a calloused paw seized the handle just below her hand and placed the skillet on the ground.

      “I’m afraid I was too late tuh save the bacon, but I hope yuh didn’t git burned,” Chet said.

      The girl displayed two soft palms across which wavered-several long white welts.

      “I—I—guess I’m not much good at this camp-fire cooking,” she faltered. “But I’ll learn,” she added grimly.

      “Have yuh got some soda?” Chet demanded, and when Nevada hurriedly produced a package he put some on the girl’s painful burns, and urged her to continue the application until the pain was relieved.

      “It’s better already,” she said. “Thank you for helping me.”

      “Sorry I couldn’t do more,” Chet said. “And I’d like tuh do something tuh help yuh find yore brother.”

      “I’m afraid we owe you something already,” she said. “Aren’t you the man who gave us back our money?”

      She was looking straight at him out of honest golden-brown eyes which wouldn’t be denied. He couldn’t lie to her.

      “Yes, I’m the man,” he admitted.

      “And those other two were the men who held us up?”

      “Yes.”

      The

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