The Lonesome Trail and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 203 pages of information about The Lonesome Trail and Other Stories.

The Lonesome Trail and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 203 pages of information about The Lonesome Trail and Other Stories.

Whereupon Rusty cautiously opened the door, shoved a tray with bottle and glasses ostentatiously out into the sunlight for a peace offering, and finding that hostilities ceased, came forth in much fear and served them.

They drank solemnly.

“Take another one, darn yuh,” commanded Weary.

They drank again, more solemnly.

The sun beat harshly down upon the deserted street, and upon the bare, tousled, brown head of Weary.  The four stared at him uneasily; they had never seen him like this before, and it gave him an odd, unfamiliar air that worried them more than they would have cared to own.

Only Pink refused to lose heart.  “Well, come on—­let’s wake up these dead ones,” he shouted, drawing his gun and firing into the air.  “Get busy, you sleepers! Yip! Cowboys in town!” He wheeled and darted off down the street, shooting and yelling, and the others, with Weary in their midst, followed.  At the blacksmith shop, Pink, tacitly the leader of the rescuers, would have gone straight on out of town.  But Weary whirled and galloped back, firing merrily into the air.  A bit chagrined, Pink wheeled and galloped at his heels, fuming inwardly at the methodical reloading after every third shot.  Cal, on the other side, glanced across at Pink, shook his head ruefully and shoved more shells into his smoking gun.

Back and forth from the store at one end of the street to the blacksmith shop at the other they rode, yelling till their throats ached and shooting till their gun-barrels were hot; and Weary kept pace with them and out-yelled and out-shot the most energetic, and never once forgot the little ceremony of shoving in fresh shells after the third shot.  Drunk, Weary appeared much more cautious than when sober.  Pink grew hot and hoarse, and counted the shots, one, two, three, over and over till his brain grew sick.

On the seventh trip down the street, a sleek, black head appeared for an instant over the top of the board-pile in the hotel yard.  A pair of frightened, slant eyes peered out at them.  Weary, just about to reload, caught sight of him and gave a whoop of pure joy.

“Lord, how I do hate a Chink!” he cried, and dropped to the ground the three shells in his hand that he might fire the two in his gun.

Pink yelled also.  “Nab him, Cal!” and caught his gun arm the instant Weary’s last bullet left the barrel.

Cal leaned and caught Weary round the neck in a close hug.  Jack Bates and Happy Jack crowded close, eager to help but finding no place to take hold.

“Now, you blame fool, come along home and quit disgracing the whole community!” cried Cal, half angrily.  “Ain’t yuh got any sense at all?”

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Project Gutenberg
The Lonesome Trail and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.