CHAPTER VIII
"A TIMBER WOLF IN HIS OWN COUNTRY"
When The Orphan said good-by to Bill he sat quietly in his saddle for aminute watching the departing stage and wondered how it was that he hadthe decency to avoid a fight with the cowboys in the presence of thewomen. Then Helen's words came to him and he smiled at the idea of peacewhen he would have to fight the outfit before sundown. The heat of the sunon his bare head recalled him from his mental wanderings and he wheeledabruptly and galloped along the trail to where he remembered that a tiny,blood-stained handkerchief lay in the dust and sand. Soon he espied itand, swinging over in the saddle, deftly picked it up and regained hisupright position, his head reeling at the effort. Unfolding it he examinedthe neat "H" done in silk in one corner and smiled as he put it in hischaps pocket where he kept his extra ammunition.
"Peace and war in one pocket," he muttered, grinning at his cartridges'new and unusual companion.
One of the Winchesters worked loose from its lashings and started to slidetoward the ground. He quickly grasped it and made it secure, smiling atthe number of rifles he had had and lost during the past three weeks.
"Funny how this country has been shedding Winchesters lately," he mused."There was the five I got by the big bowlder, which I lost playing tagwith that d----d Cross Bar-8 gang, and here's two more, and I just leftthree what I didn't want. Well, they're real handy for stopping a rush,and I reckons that's what I'm up against this time. If I can find alikely spot for a scrap before dark I may stop that gang in bang-upstyle, d----n them."
Half an hour later he caught sight of a moving body of horsemen to thesoutheast of him and his glasses enabled him to make them out.
He counted them and made their number to be twenty-two, which accountedfor the five warriors who had pursued the stage coach. The odds were fineand he laughed joyously, recklessly: "All is fair in love and war," hemuttered savagely.
Before the Indians had come upon the scene he had been alone to facefive angry and vengeful men, and whom he had every reason to believewere at least fair fighters. Had the positions been reversed they wouldnot have hesitated to make use of any stratagem to save themselves--andhere were two contingents, both of which would take his life at the firstopportunity. He felt no distaste at the game he was about to play; onthe other hand, it pleased him immensely to know that he was superiorin intellect to his enemies. They both wanted blood, and they shouldhave it. If they found too much, well and good--that was their lookout.And no less pleasing was the knowledge that he had sent them north andthat now he could make use of them. He wondered what they had been doingfor the last three weeks and why they were still in that part of thecountry, but he did not care, for they were where he wanted them to be.
"Twenty-two mad Apaches on the warpath against five cow-wrastlers!"he exulted. "More than four to one, and just aching to get square onsomebody! That Cross Bar-8 gang will have something to weep about purtyd----n soon! And I shore hope they don't get tired and quit chasing me."
"I don't know how you are on the jump, bronch," he said to his mount, "butI reckon you can get through that, all right."
The cowboys disappeared from his sight behind the northern chaparral,and as they did so he sunk his spurs into his horse and rode straight atthe prickly screen and, going partly over and partly through it, gallopedwestward as the war party and the ranch contingent met. The shots andyells were as music to his ears, and he bowed in mockery and waved hishand at the turmoil as he made his escape. The timber wolf had won.