“The younker is too plucky a chap to light out ’cause the governor has been sent under; he’s had better luck than most tenderfeet who come out here and start in the cattle bus’ness; he done well last year, and if the rustlers let him alone, he’ll do a good deal better this year; he may move, but he ain’t agoin’ to let them chaps hurry him, you can make up your mind to that.”
The couple smoked a minute or two in silence. Then Weber, without removing his pipe from between his lips, uttered the words:
“Budd, something’s going to happen powerful soon.”
Hankinson, also keeping his pipe between his lips, turned his head and looked wonderingly at his friend. He did not speak, but the action told his curiosity; he did not understand the words.
“I mean what I say,” added Weber, shaking his head; “I know it.”
“What do you mean? Something happens every night and every day.”
“That isn’t what I’m driving at; something’s going to happen afore daylight; you and me ain’t through with this work.”
Hankinson was still dissatisfied. He took his pipe from his mouth, and, looking sideways at his friend, asked:
“Can’t you come down to facts and let a fellow know what you’re driving at?”
“I don’t exactly know myself, but I feel it in my left leg.”
At this strange remark the other laughed heartily and silently. He had little patience with superstition. He knew his friend held peculiar whims in that respect. Weber expected something in the nature of scoffing and was prepared for it. He spoke doggedly:
“It has never deceived me. Six years ago, when we was trying to round up Geronimo and his Apache imps, ten of us camped in the Moggollon Mountains. Hot! Well, you never knowed anything like it. All day long the metal of our guns would blister our naked hands; we didn’t get a drop of water from sunup till sundown; we was close on to the trail of the varmints, and we kept at it by moonlight till our horses gave out and we tumbled out among the rocks so used up that we could hardly stand. Our lieutenant was a bright young chap from South Car’lina that had come out of West Point only that summer, but he was true blue and warn’t afeared of anything. We all liked him. I had seen him fight when a dozen of the Apaches thought they had us foul, and I was proud of him. He belonged to a good family, though that didn’t make him any better than anyone else, but he treated us white.
“So when we went into camp, I goes to him and I says, says I, ‘Lieutenant, there’s going to be trouble.’ He looked up at me in his pleasant way and asks, ‘What makes you think so, Grizzly?’ The others was listening, but I didn’t mind that, and out with it. ‘’Cause,’ says I, ‘my left leg tells me so.’
“‘And how does your leg tell you?’ he asked again, with just a faint smile that wasn’t anything like the snickers and guffaws of the other chaps. ’Whenever a twitch begins at the knee and runs down to my ankle,’ says I, ’that is in the left leg, and then keeps darting back and forth and up and down, just as though some one was pricking it with a needle, do you know what it says?’