The Two-Gun Man | Page 3

Charles Alden Seltzer
skill. He still sat lazily in
the saddle, his gaze wandering languidly over the crowd. The latter

plainly expected him to take part in the shooting match and was
impatient over his inaction.
"Two-gun," sneered a man who stood near the saloon door. "I wonder
what he totes them two guns for?"
The shooter heard and turned toward the man who had spoken, his lips
wreathed satirically.
"I reckon he wouldn't shoot nothin' with them," he said, addressing the
man who had spoken.
Several men laughed. The tall man who had revealed interest before
now raised a hand, checking further comment.
"That offer of a hundred to the man who can beat that shootin' still
goes," he declared. "An' I'm taking off the condition. The man that tries
don't have to belong to Dry Bottom. No stranger is barred!"
The stranger's glance again met the shooter's. The latter grinned
felinely. Then the rider spoke. The crowd gave him its polite attention.
"I reckon you-all think you've seen some shootin'," he said in a steady,
even voice, singularly free from boast. "But I reckon you ain't seen any
real shootin'." He turned to the tall, grave-faced man. "I ain't got no
hundred," he said, "but I'm goin' to show you."
He still sat in the saddle. But now with an easy motion he swung down
and hitched his pony to the rail.

CHAPTER II
THE STRANGER SHOOTS
The stranger seemed taller on the ground than in the saddle and an
admirable breadth of shoulder and slenderness of waist told eloquently

of strength. He could not have been over twenty-five or six. Yet certain
hard lines about his mouth, the glint of mockery in his eyes, the
pronounced forward thrust of the chin, the indefinable force that
seemed to radiate from him, told the casual observer that here was a
man who must be approached with care.
But apparently the shooter saw no such signs. In the first glance that
had been exchanged between the two men there had been a lack of
ordinary cordiality. And now, as the rider slid down from his pony and
advanced toward the center of the street, the shooter's lips curled.
Writhing through them came slow-spoken words.
"You runnin' sheep, stranger?"
The rider's lips smiled, but his eyes were steady and cold. In them
shone a flash of cold humor. He stood, quietly contemplating his
insulter.
Smiles appeared on the faces of several of the onlookers. The tall man
with the grave face watched with a critical eye. The insult had been
deliberate, and many men crouched, plainly expecting a serious
outcome. But the stranger made no move toward his guns, and when he
answered he might have been talking about the weather, so casual was
his tone.
"I reckon you think you're a plum man," he said quietly. "But if you are,
you ain't showed it much--buttin' in with that there wise observation.
An' there's some men who think that shootin' at a man is more excitin'
than shootin' at a can."
There was a grim quality in his voice now. He leaned forward slightly,
his eyes cold and alert. The shooter sneered experimentally. Again the
audience smiled.
But the tall man now stepped forward. "You've made your play,
stranger," he said quietly. "I reckon it's up to you to make good."
"Correct," agreed the stranger. "I'm goin' to show you some real

shootin'. You got another can?"
Some one dived into the Silver Dollar and returned in a flash with
another tomato can. This the stranger took, removing the label, as the
shooter had done. Then, smiling, he took a position in the center of the
street, the can in his right hand.
He did not draw his weapon as the shooter had done, but stood loosely
in his place, his right hand still grasping the can, the left swinging idly
by his side. Apparently he did not mean to shoot. Sneers reached the
faces of several men in the crowd. The shooter growled, "Fourflush."
There was a flash as the can rose twenty feet in the air, propelled by the
right hand of the stranger. As the can reached the apex of its climb the
stranger's right hand descended and grasped the butt of the weapon at
his right hip. There was a flash as the gun came out; a gasp of
astonishment from the watchers. The can was arrested in the first foot
of its descent by the shock of the first bullet striking it. It jumped up
and out and again began its interrupted fall, only to stop dead still in the
air as another bullet struck it. There was an infinitesimal pause, and
then twice more the can shivered and jumped. No man in the crowd but
could tell that the bullets
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