Emerson's Wife and Other Western Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 214 pages of information about Emerson's Wife and Other Western Stories.

Emerson's Wife and Other Western Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 214 pages of information about Emerson's Wife and Other Western Stories.

“Nick, you ’re drunk,” said Tuttle reprovingly.

“You ’re away off, Tom!  I was yesterday, but I ‘ve been teetotallin’ ever since I came into this room last night, and the whole Arizona desert ain’t in it with my throat this mornin’!  I want six cocktails!”

“No, you don’t,” the other interrupted decisively.  “You-all can have some coffee,” and he stepped back to the door and gave the order.

Ellhorn sat up and looked with indignant surprise at his friend.  “Tom Tuttle—­” he began.

“Shut up!” Tuttle interrupted.  “Come and soak your head.”

Ellhorn submitted to the head-soaking without protest, but drank his coffee with grumblings that it was not coffee, but cocktails, that he wanted.

“Nick, ain’t you-all ashamed of yourself?” Tuttle asked severely.  But it was anxiety rather than reproof that was evident in his large, round face and blue eyes.  His fair skin was tanned and burned to a bright red, and against its blazing color glowed softly a short, tawny mustache.

“No, Tommy, not yet,” Nick replied cheerfully.  “It’s too soon.  It’s likely I will be to-morrow, or mebbe even this afternoon.  But not now.  You-all ought to be more reasonable.”

“To think you ’d pile in here like this, when I ’m in a hole and need you bad,” Tuttle went on in a grieved tone.

The fogs had begun to clear out of Ellhorn’s head, and he looked up with quick concern.  “What’s up, Tom?”

“The Dysert gang ’s broke loose again, and Marshal Black ’s in San Francisco, and Sheriff Williamson ’s gone to Chicago.  I ’ve got to ride herd on ’em all by myself.”

“What have they done?”

“Old man Paxton was found dead by his front gate yesterday morning.  He ’d been killed by a knife-thrower, and a boss one at that—­cut right across his jugular.  I went straight for Felipe Vigil, and last night I got a clue from him, and he promised to tell me more to-day.  But this morning he was found dead under the long bridge with his tongue cut out.  That’s enough for ’em; not another Greaser will dare open his mouth now.  I wired you yesterday at Plumas to come as quick as you could.”

“Then what you gruntin’ about, Tom?  I left Plumas before your wire got there, and how could I be any quicker ’n that?”

“I wish Emerson was here.  I ’d like to have his judgment about this business.  Emerson ’s always got sure good judgment.”

“Send for him, then,” was Nick’s prompt rejoinder.

Tuttle looked at him with surprise and disapproval.  “Nick, are you drunker than you look?  You-all know he ’s just got back from his wedding trip.”

“But he ’s back, all right, ain’t he!  Neither one of us has ever got into a hole yet that Emerson did n’t come a-runnin’, and fixed for whatever might happen.  And he’s never needed us that we did n’t get there as quick as we could.  You-all don’t reckon, Tom, that Emerson Mead’s liver ’s turned white just because he ’s got a wife!”

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Emerson's Wife and Other Western Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.