Square Deal Sanderson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Square Deal Sanderson.

Square Deal Sanderson eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Square Deal Sanderson.

“The damned hussy!” he raged, when he realized that the money was not in the lounge.

He went out, got on his horse, and rode across the level back of the house, and up the slope leading to the mesa, where he had seen Sanderson riding earlier in the day.

For an hour he rode, warily, for he did not want to come upon Sanderson unawares—­if his men had not intercepted his enemy; and then reaching the edge of a section of hilly country, he halted and sat motionless in the saddle.

For, from some distance ahead of him he heard the reports of firearms, and over him, at the sound, swept a curious reluctance to go any farther in that direction.

For it seemed to him there was something forbidding in the sound; it was as though the sounds carried to him on the slight breeze were burdened with an evil portent; that they carried a threat and a warning.

He sat long there, undecided, vacillating.  Then he shuddered, wheeled his horse, and sent him scampering over the back trail.

He rode to the Bar D. His men—­the regular punchers—­were working far down in the basin, and there was no one in the house.

He sat for hours alone in his office, waiting for news of the men he had sent after Sanderson; and as the interval of their absence grew longer the dark forebodings that had assailed him when within hearing distance of the firing seized him again—­grew more depressing, and he sat, gripping the arms of his chair, a clammy perspiration stealing over him.

He shook off the feeling at last, and stood up, scowling.

“That’s what a man gets for givin’ up to a damn fool notion like that,” he said, thinking of the fear that had seized him while listening to the shooting.  “Once a man lets on he’s afraid, the thing keeps a workin’ on him till he’s certain sure he’s a coward.  Them boys didn’t need me, anyway—­they’ll get Sanderson.”

So he justified his lack of courage, and spent some hours reading.  But at last the strain grew too great, and as the dusk came on he began to have thoughts of Dal Colton.  Ben Nyland must have reached home by this time.  Had Colton succeeded?

He thought of riding to Nyland’s ranch, but he gave up that idea when he reasoned that perhaps Colton had failed, and in that case Nyland wouldn’t be the most gentle person in the world to face on his own property.

If Colton had succeeded he would find him, in Okar.  So he mounted his horse and rode to Okar.

The town seemed to be deserted when he dismounted in front of the City Hotel.  He did not go inside the building, merely looking in through one of the windows, and seeing a few men in there, playing cards in a listless manner.  He did not see Colton.

He looked into several other windows.  Colton was nowhere to be seen.  In several places Dale inquired about him.  No one had seen Colton that day.

No one said anything to Dale about what had happened.  Perhaps they thought he knew.  At any rate, Dale heard no word of what had transpired during his absence.  Men spoke to him, or nodded—­and looked away, to look at him when his back was turned.

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Project Gutenberg
Square Deal Sanderson from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.