Gunmans Reckoning | Page 8

Max Brand
voice of Donnegan.
"Somehow there's always a fight wherever I go," he said. "Fights just sort of grow up
around me."
Lefty Joe snarled.
"You didn't mean nothing by just 'happening' to run into three of my boys one after
another?"
"Not a thing."
Lefty rocked himself back and forth in an ecstasy of impatience.
"Why don't you stay put?" he complained. "Why don't you stake out your own ground
and stay put in it? You cut in on every guy's territory. There ain't any privacy any more
since you hit the road. What you got? A roving commission?"
Donnegan waited for a moment before he answered. And when he spoke his voice had
altered. Indeed, he had remarkable ability to pitch his voice into the roar of the freight
train, and above or beneath it, and give it a quality such as he pleased.
"I'm following a trail, but not yours," he admitted at length. "I'm following a trail. I've
been at it these two years and nothing has come of it."
"Who you after?"
"A man with red hair."
"That tells me a lot."
Donnegan refused to explain.
"What you got against him--the color of his hair?"
And Lefty roared contentedly at his own stale jest.
"It's no good," replied Donnegan. "I'll never get on the trail."

Lefty broke in: "You mean to say you've been working two solid years and all on a trail
that you ain't even found?"
The silence answered him in the affirmative.
"Ain't nobody been able to tip you off to him?" went on Lefty, intensely interested.
"Nobody. You see, he's a hard sort to describe. Red hair, that's all there was about him for
a clue. But if any one ever saw him stripped they'd remember him by a big blotchy
birthmark on his left shoulder."
"Eh?" grunted Lefty Joe.
He added: "What was his name?"
"Don't know. He changed monikers when he took to the road."
"What was he to you?"
"A man I'm going to find."
"No matter where the trail takes you?"
"No matter where."
At this Lefty was seized with unaccountable laughter. He literally strained his lungs with
that Homeric outburst. When he wiped the tears from his eyes, at length, the shadow on
the opposite side of the doorway had disappeared. He found his companion leaning over
him, and this time he could catch the dull glint of starlight on both hair and eyes.
"What d'you know?" asked Donnegan.
"How do you stand toward this bird with the birthmark and the red hair?" queried Lefty
with caution.
"What d'you know?" insisted Donnegan.
All at once passion shook him; he fastened his grip in the shoulder of the larger man, and
his fingertips worked toward the bone.
"What do you know?" he repeated for the third time, and now there was no hint of
laughter in the hard voice of Lefty.
"You fool, if you follow that trail you'll go to the devil. It was Rusty Dick; and he's
dead!"
His triumphant laughter came again, but Donnegan cut into it.
"Rusty Dick was the one you--killed!"

"Sure. What of it? We fought fair and square."
"Then Rusty wasn't the man I want. The man I want would of eaten two like you, Lefty."
"What about the birthmark? It sure was on his shoulder; Donnegan."
"Heavens!" whispered Donnegan.
"What's the matter?"
"Rusty Dick," gasped Donnegan. "Yes, it must have been he."
"Sure it was. What did you have against him?"
"It was a matter of blood--between us," stammered Donnegan.
His voice rose in a peculiar manner, so that Lefty shrank involuntarily.
"You killed Rusty?"
"Ask any of the boys. But between you and me, it was the booze that licked Rusty Dick. I
just finished up the job and surprised everybody."
The train was out of the mountains and in a country of scattering hills, but here it struck a
steep grade and settled down to a grind of slow labor; the rails hummed, and suspense
filled the freight car.
"Hey," cried Lefty suddenly. "You fool, you'll do a flop out the door in about a minute!"
He even reached out to steady the toppling figure, but Donnegan pitched straight out into
the night. Lefty craned his neck from the door, studying the roadbed, but at that moment
the locomotive topped the little rise and the whole train lurched forward.
"After all," murmured Lefty Joe, "it sounds like Donnegan. Hated a guy so bad that he
hadn't any use for livin' when he heard the other guy was dead. But I'm never goin' to
cross his path again, I hope."
5
But Donnegan had leaped clear of the roadbed, and he struck almost to the knees in a
drift of sand. Otherwise, he might well have broken his legs with that
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