The Heritage of the Hills Part 32
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"Me an' the kid was packin' a sack o' salt on a burro down toward the river," Adam observed, approaching the cave, "an' thought we'd belly up an' have a little smile. Cows need salt. h.e.l.lo there, Chuck!"--as the round, boyish face of Allegan shone like a small moon from the dark interior.
"h.e.l.lo, Old Man!" replied the youth. He was apprehensive over Pence's glowering silence, and, to hide his feelings, quickly opened the spigot over a gla.s.s and pa.s.sed the water-white drink to his chief.
Adam Selden sat down with it, and Bolar came into the cave and was also given a drink by Chuck.
"How early you gonta start the drive for the mountains this year, Old Man?" asked the self-appointed host, nervously filling gla.s.ses for himself and the glowering Pence, who stood with arms folded Napoleonlike across his breast, scowlingly regarding the newcomers.
"Well, gra.s.s's holdin' out _muy bueno_," said Selden thoughtfully. "Late rains done it. I don't think we'll have cause to move 'em any earlier than common. The filaree down in the river bottom is--"
But here Napoleon broke his moody silence. "I got somethin' to talk about outside o' gra.s.s," snapped Obed Pence.
A tense stillness ensued, during which Old
Man Selden deliberately drained his gla.s.s and pa.s.sed it back to Chuck to be refilled.
"Well, Obed," he drawled lazily, "got anything important to say, just say her."
"Oh, I'll say her!" cried Pence, and tossed off his drink of burning liquor by way of fortification.
"Ain't been settin' here by that bar'l a mite too long, have ye, Obed?--if I ain't too bold in askin'," was Selden's remark, spoken in the tone which turneth away wrath.
"No, I ain't been here too long," Pence told his captain. "And I'm glad you've come, Old Man. I want to talk to you about this fella Drew, and the way things 'a' been a-goin'."
"Shoot!" invited the old man's booming voice.
Obed came directly to the point. "Well, why ain't we runnin' Drew out?"
Old Man Selden balanced his gla.s.s on one peaked knee while he reached into a pocket of his _chaparejos_ for a plug of tobacco. He was deliberate as he replied:
"Well, Obed, I was waitin' a spell 'count of a little matter that's on my mind just at present. I'd advise ye not to be worryin' about Drew.
I'll tend to him when it's the proper time."
"Yes, you will!" sniffed Pence sarcastically. "But, allowin' that you will, I want my booze in the meantime."
"There's the bar'l," said Old Man Selden.
"That ain't gonta last forever!"
"Just so! But time she gets low, we'll be makin' more ag'in. Time Drew's gone and we get water runnin' from Sulphur Spring ag'in."
"And I'm wantin' my profit from what we could sell," Pence added, unmollified. "I got no money, and won't have none till killin' time, 'less the still's runnin'. 'Tain't worryin' you none. You got all you want without makin' monkey rum. But it ain't like that with me. Why, we was makin' five gallon a day--at twenty-five bucks a gallon! And now nary a drop. I need the money."
"Well, Obed, they's money all about ye," the old man boomed. "And they's things that can be turned into money layin' 'round loose everywhere."
"And there's a county jail, too!" snapped Pence.
"And also federal prisons," Adam added, nodding toward the still and the crude fermentation vats.
"Rats! Pro'bition sneaks ain't got me scared! But bustin' into somebody's store's a different matter. And while we're talkin' about it, Old Man, I don't see as you're so keen for a little job like that as you was some months ago."
"Gettin' old, Obed--gettin' old, as the fella says. Squirt another shot into her, Chuck." He pa.s.sed his gla.s.s again. "I'll leave all that to you kids in future, I'm thinkin'."
"But take your share, o' course," sneered Pence.
"Oh, I reckon not, Obed--I reckon not. I got enough to die on--that's all I need. Just putter 'round with a few critters for my remainin'
years, then turn up my toes peaceful-like. I'm gettin' old, Obed--just so!"
There was another prolonged, strained silence. Pence emptied his gla.s.s twice while it lasted, and his Dutch courage grew apace.
"Looky-here, Old Man," he said at last, "Le's get down to tacks: You're double-crossin' us, an' we're dead onto it. For some reason you don't wanta drive Drew outa Clinker Creek Canon. It's got somethin' to do with that fire dance. There's more in it for you if you leave Drew alone than if you put a burr under his tail. That's all right so far's it goes. But you're tryin' to hog it. You're squeezin' the rest o' the Poison Oakers out--all but your four kids. Ed and Digger and Chuck here and Jey and me's left out in the cold. That's what! And we don't like it, and ain't gonta stand for it. If there's more profit in it to leave Drew alone, leave 'im alone. But le's all get our share o' this big profit, like we always did."
"Couple o' more shots and ye'll be weepin' about her, Pencie," dryly observed old Adam.
"Never mind that! I c'n handle my booze. You come across."
"I've known ye about thirteen year, Obed," said Adam in tones dangerously purring, "and I've never heard ye talk to me thataway before. I wouldn't now, if I was you."
"And I've never seen you act like you're doin' in those thirteen years!"
cried Pence. "Before now there wasn't no need to bawl you out. But you're turnin' crooked."
Adam rose and placed an enormous hand on Obed's shoulder.
"Just so! Just so!" he purred. "Now, you ramble down an' get in yer saddle an' ride on home, Pencie. Ye've had enough liquor for today. An'
when ye're sober we'll all talk about her. Just so! That's best. Go on now--yer blood's hot!"
Pence jerked his shoulder away and backed farther into the gloom of the cave. Old Man Selden quickly moved so that his body was not silhouetted against the light streaming in at the mouth.
"I don't want none o' yer dam' fatherly advice," growled Pence. "I just want a square deal. If there's a reason why Drew oughta be left alone I want to know it. And I want to know it now!"
"Just so! Are ye really mad, now, Pencie?"
"I am mad!"
"_And_ sober?"
"Yes, sober. Shoot her out!"
The eagle eyes of Old Man Selden were fixed intently on the face showing from the gloom. Every muscle was tense, every faculty alert. His beetling grey brows came down and hid his eyes from the younger man, but those cold blue eyes saw everything.
"Bein's ye're sober, Obed," the old man drawled, "I'll be obliged to tell ye that no Poison Oaker ner any other man ever talked to me like you been doin' and got away with it. Just so! And, bein's ye're sober, I'll say that my business is my own, an' I'll keep her to myself till I get ready to tell her. Furthermore, I'm still runnin' the Poison Oakers, and what I say goes now same as a couple months ago. I know what's good for us boys better'n any o' the rest o' ye, and I'm doin' it."
"You're a dam' liar!" shouted Pence.
Old Man Selden's gun hand leaped to his hip. "Come a-shootin', kid!" he bellowed.
He whipped out his Colt, shot from the hip. The roar of his big gun filled the cave. Screened by the smoke of it, Old Man Selden sprang nimbly to the deeper shadows.
There he crouched, his cavernous eyes peering out through the dense, confined smoke like a lynx posing to spring upon a burrowing gopher.
The Heritage of the Hills Part 32
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The Heritage of the Hills Part 32 summary
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- Related chapter:
- The Heritage of the Hills Part 31
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