Dade caught his meaning and laughed a little over it. “The horse,” he said, “belongs to the Committee; my friend does not.”
“Si, Senor—but surely that is true. Only—” he stroked his crisp beard thoughtfully—“the senors would better go to-morrow to the patron. There the gringos dare not come. In this poor hut the senors may not be safe—for we are but three poor vaqueros when all are here. We will do our best—”
“Three vaqueros,” declared Dade with fine diplomacy, “as brave as the three who live here, would equal twenty of the Committee. But we will not let it come to that.”
Manuel took the flattery with a glimpse of white teeth and a deprecatory wave of the hand, and himself qualified it modestly afterward.
“With the knife—perhaps. But the gringos have guns which speak fast. Still, we would do our best—”
“Say, if he’s going back to town to-morrow,” spake Jack suddenly, from where he reclined in the shadow “why can’t I write a note to Bill Wilson and have him send down my guns? The Captain took them away, you know; but he won’t object to giving them back now!” His voice was bitter.
“The rest of them might. You seem to think that when you killed Perkins you wiped out the whole delegation—which you didn’t. What was the row about; if you don’t mind telling me?”
“I thought you knew,” said Jack quite sincerely, which proved more than anything how absorbed he was in his own part in the affair. He shifted his head upon his clasped hands so that his eyes might rest upon the waning firelight, where the pot of frijoles, set back from supper, was still steaming languidly in the hot ashes.
“You started it yourself, two weeks ago,” he announced whimsically, to lighten a little the somber tale. “If you hadn’t bought that white horse from that drunken Spaniard, I’d be holding a handful of aces and kings to-night, most likely, in Bill Wilson’s place. And my legs wouldn’t be aching like the devil,” he added, reminded anew of his troubles, when he shifted his position. “It’s all your fault, bought the horse.”
Dade grinned and bent to hold a twig in the coals, that he might light a cigarette. “All right, I’m the guilty party. Let’s have the consequences of my evil deed,” he advised, settling back on his heels and lowering an eyelid at Manuel in behalf of this humorous partner of his.
“You bought the horse and broke the Spaniard’s heart and ruined his temper. And he and Sandy had a fight, and—So,” he went on, after a two-minute break in the argument, “when I heard Swift sneering something about Sandy, last night, I rose up in meeting and told him and some others what I thought of ’em. I was not,” he explained, “thinking nice thoughts at the time. You see, Perkins, since he got the lead, has gathered a mighty scaly bunch around him, and they’ve been running things to suit themselves.