marked man © D. APPLETON-CENTURY CO. By H. C WIRE WNU SERVICE CHAPTER XIII—Continued Walt brought his eyes back, meet ing the unreadable darkness of hers. “Not unless you tell me why you want it,” he stated flatly. “That bullet is the only thing I know about for certain; my key maybe to un lock a few blind doors.” “Walt Gandy," Helen asked, lean ing toward him across the table top, “did anyone ever tell you that some doors should never be opened? I want that bullet for the best of rea sons. No, I can't explain. I can’t, Walt. But perhaps if you knew one thing . . .” A look of despair came upon lips momentarily closed; she spread her hands hopelessly, and then said, “It’s always true that one lie has to be covered with another, and an other. Bill Hollister lied at the Chino Drake inquest.” Inside Walt Gandy everything seemed to stop. He sat like stone. Steadily Helen went on: “He lied about being on the south rims that day the cook was killed. I know, because I was on the south rims then myself. Bill wasn't there. Now will you give me the bullet?” He shook his head. “I haven’t got it.” “But you can get it for me!” she said quickly. “Can’t you?” “Tomorrow, maybe, in town. I suppose we’ll be called in for a hearing over Powell.” “And then, Walt, you’ll go.” The girl’s voice was all at once surpris ingly tender. Gandy looked at her. “You’ll tell me nothing, Helen?” “Only this, there’s going to be no war on the Emigrant range, no more killing. I’m working our troubles out here.” “You are!” Then Walt Gandy’s smile came slowly, the fine lines crowfooting his bronzed skin. “All the more reason for me to stick. Do you think for a minute I’d quit? Curiosity if nothing else would keep me hanging around. But I’m in this as much as anybody. I’m in the groove, and I’ll see where it leads, regardless: “You mean that?” “Why not?” Helen Cameron half rose from the bench, hands on the table edge, and once more the color was gone from her face. She dropped back. "You don’t know what you’re doing! You can’t! What if you are in it? Go ahead and throw your life away and even that wouldn’t stop all this horror! But I can stop it—and I’m going to!” She’d try, no doubt of that, In •whatever way seemed open. Yet to Walt Gandy a forced note In this breathless outburst had too much the sound of lashing herself into do ing something almost beyond her nerve. His glance shifted out the win dow into rapidly graying afternoon. He avoided her desperate eyes, but could still hear the overwrought quickness of her breathing. Abrupt ly it ceased; and then in a darting look he caught the focus of her gaze fixed beyond him. Slowly, Gandy turned, and was aware that he had been sitting with his back to the closed hallway door. In the instant of that discovery he knew the meaning of the girl’s look. They were not alone in this house! He sprang up. But Helen was ahead of him in reaching the door. Backed against it, both hands be hind her gripping the knob, she con fronted him cold as steel: “Don’t you dare!” Gandy reached in under his coat, came out with the thirty-eight, and at sight of it her face blanched. She choked. “Walt!” came from lips that were suddenly trembling. Sharply he said, “I don’t want to hurt you. But I’m going in.” With his left arm around her he took the two small fists in his one. She struggled. “I’m sorry,” said Gandy. “Things like this have gone far enough. I’m going to see who is in there—who has been listening to my talk!” He had the girl at one side of the casement now, released her abrupt ly, grabbed the knob and flung the door inward. In the same move he thumbed back the gun hammer. The door banged hollowly. Noth ing sounded after that. For a sec ond Gandy waited, then stepped from the kitchen into a dim part of the house where he had not been before. CHAPTER XIV CASH CAMERON had built early on the Emigrant Bench, and he had put up a house with the thick log walls and deep windows of a fort. The kitchen wing with storage shed and foreman’s quarters had been added later. That was mod ern; of mill-sawed boards, battened on the outside, painted white with in, But as Walt Gandy passed from the kitchen, through a short hallway into the great front living-room, it was like stepping back half a hun dred years. For this main part had kept the look of Cameron’s pioneer ing. By the glint of rifle barrels he made out a gun rack near the fire place. Dark outlines of chairs showed against the plastered wall. A Navajo rug woven in an old four corners-of-the-earth pattern made a long gray patch upon the floor. Oth er pieces of furniture were no more than vague forms, grouped mostly around the chimney end. From the moment of entering here Gandy’s eyes had been pulled re peatedly to the fireplace maw. Now he stood squinting at the black square; until suddenly his nose brought definite knowledge before sight registered what he was squint ing at. The red eye of a cigarette stub glowed in the fireplace ash. Lavic? Had he circled from the bunk shacks and come in by the front entrance? But Gandy had watched from the window, and no one had crossed the open front clearing. Besides that, Lavic wouldn’t matter; he was deaf. His soundless movement carried him on to a door which must lead into the family wing of the house. By this time he knew the front room was empty. He paused. “Walt! Listen to me!” Appealing hands gripped his right arm. Whis pering, Helen begged: “Don’t! You can’t help. I’m working this out, everything! You must not go any farther.” But Gandy shook his head. He freed his arm from her tightening fingers. The door gave more easily than he expected, as if it had been closed not quite far enough for the latch to click into place. It opened wide at his touch, and before him was a small plain cubicle with a desk, a “That bullet is the only thing 1 know about for certain.” chair, and a cot; Cash Cameron’s office, disordered, empty. Immediately on his right was a door leading to the inner court formed by the house wings. Gandy sprang across to it, found it un locked. Whoever had been here was gone now. But there was still another pas sage ahead. He moved rapidly along this, seeing a bedroom on the left of it, and then the last room of the family wing at the end. Helen Cameron was no longer be hind him. In her father’s office she had turned back. Walt stopped, for the door was open, and he stood motionless, brought up short on the threshold of the girl’s own four walls. It was a large, airy place, with windows on three sides, cur tained, a fleece rug on the floor, in timate with her things that revealed unguardedly the girl who lived here. Horsethief Fisher’s voice blared suddenly outside. Gandy jumped back along the passage. By the time he had reached the kitchen the old bronc rider and Paul Champion had tramped in. Helen was putting plates on the dining-room table. “Man an’ child!" Horsethief burst out. “Give us grub!" Horsethief hung his battered hat on its own particular wall peg and reached under the sink for the wash pan. "Say, Miss Helen,” he called. “Someone leave here just now? Paul he was ahead of me coming along the north pasture and thought a rid er took off southwest.” From his position, entering the kitchen from the living-room. Walt Gandy could not see the girl. Wheth er she signaled Fisher or not, he couldn’t tell. Without pause nor change in his conversational tone, Horsethief fin ished, "But the kid he gets ideas sometimes. I guess he didn’t see no one.” In another step Gandy could look at Helen Cameron. She was mo tionless beside the long ranch table, a dish in her hands. “Walt,” she said quickly, “I haven’t told them You'd better.” He nodded and went to the wash ' bench where Fisher and young ! Champion were bent over, dissolv- < ing gray dust from their faces. "We found Ranger Powell this after noon,” he said “Been dead some time." Two dripping faces turned. Horse- ! thief Fisher looked up, made no re ply, bent again and went on wash ing the back of his neck. Paul Champion stood up full height and opened his mouth. "Jeez,” he said, drawing it out. "Where’s the boss?” “Cameron won’t be around for awhile,” Gandy told him. "Hollister will be back some time tonight. Horsethief, after we eat I’m corping down to your bunk house. Wait! there, will you?” Fisher and Paul Champion were in the middle of the bunk room, near an iron barrel stove that had no Are. A single oil lamp gave dim yellow light. So savagely was he gripped In the urge to smash through any more barriers and evasions, that Gandy's stride carried him on close to Horse thief Fisher, and before the bronc rider had gathered what was hap pening, an elbow was hooked around his neck, and a hard fist was push ing against his nose. "If you don't open up and talk to me.” said Gandy, “I’m going to crack your skull and see what’s in it!” Then he grinned, dropping his arms. “Horsethief, for Lord’s sake let’s go at this thing flfty-Afty! "I think you’re the only man on the C C that has nothing to hide. I’ve listened to a lot of talk that tells nothing; now I want to hear some without a joker in it. What do you say?” Horsethief Fisher stared, blinking sun-squinted eyes. Then the round face wrinkled with good humor. It lasted but a moment. Sober ing, he said, “You’re right, Gandy. Plenty of side-mouth talkin’. Nothin' straight out.” He wiped an open hand downward over his face as if to iron off the wrinkles; a slow movement, consid ering Walt Gandy during the proc ess. "I’ve been afigurin’ on you,” he admitted. "Maybe you’re the man I been lookin’ for. Hollister, well, something’s happened to Bill lately. Cash he’s kept away from gun-fightin' too long. And Miss Hel en; shucks, I don’t know, she’s all balled up somehow.” Gandy propped himself against a post supporting double bunks and took papers and tobacco from the side pocket of his coat. “Paul,” he asked, turning to the boy whose ears were visibly stick ing out, “rustle some wood and build us a fire, will you?" "Sure!" as young ^nampion went out ne took his belt and big forty-five from a nail next the door. "Now then, Horsethief,” said Gan dy, "tell me who rode off when you came back to the place tonight. I know it’s true, because somebody was at the house before I got there. Who was it?” "Man,” Fisher declared, “I don’t know but I sure wish I did!” His squinted blue eyes shone with honest eagerness. "I do,” he ex plained, “because I been figurin’ myself that it was time to quit this game of guesswork and see just who had stacked the cards! I owe Cash Cameron a debt that I’d like to pay back by flghtin’ for the C C. But where do a fellow begin? When the cook was found dead I had my hunch. But now with Ranger Pow ell . . .’’He raised hard hands and let them fall. "Make a guess,” Gandy urged. “About tonight, I mean. Who could have been there in the house while the rest of us were away, and who might have been taking off across the bench when you came in?” Horsethief shook his bald head. "I didn’t see. It was Paul who caught sight of someone on a smoky blue, thought he did anyway. But the only man that rides a smoky blue in these parts, couldn’t have been on the C C. Leastwise he’d be a fool if he did come sneakin’ around now.” “Who’d that be, Fisher?” Gandy asked. "Jeff Stoddard.” In the act of rolling a cigarette, Walt Gandy’s fingers stopped move ment, and his brown eyes lifted for a long studying look at the man be fore him. “Stoddard. Owner of the 77?” Horsethief Fisher nodded. "Only one I know of ridin’ such an animal. But Stoddard ain’t set foot on the place since Bent Lavic began takin’ pot-shots at him two year ago. Leastwise, I always figured it was Lavic. And now with Cameron and Stoddard on the peck over winter j range in the sink, it don’t seem no way sensible that Jeff should show up here." He looked along the bunk at Fish er, who had backed against the edge and sat down. “What was Bent Lavic shooting at Stoddard for?” "Judas, I don’t know! Except that the old fellow is nuts. Hasn’t Hol lister told you about him?” "Some. Lavic aimed to be king cowman here, and isn’t, and seems to hold it against Cameron. That it?" "Hates Cameron,” said Fisher flatly. "Hates Hollister, too. I’ve seen it the last couple of months. Man, I wouldn’t trust that old roos ter the other side of a fence, lest I could watch him! "But then, there a Helen. Bet he burns candles to that girl like a fel low does in church to one of his saints! He sure worships the kid. So when Jeff Stoddard took it into his noodle to come courtin' a couple of year ago, I figure It was Lavic who used to singe his ears with a rifle bullet quite too frequent when night time came and Stoddard started home.” Silent for a moment, Walt Gandy rolled the paper ball In tightening fingers. Then he looked down and met Fisher’s gaze. "Helen in love with Stoddard, was she?” "Naw, school-kid stuff," the man declared. "She was nineteen Stod dard must have been thirty-flve. Cash, he didn’t like it so much, and the thing was ended." Walt Gandy said nothing. He stood motionless, leaning with a shoulder braced against the bunk support, but with a body gone all at once cold from more than the chilled air of the room.' For it was plain to him now who had been in the house with Helen this afternoon. CHAPTER XV THE immediate, and too obvious, conclusion brought by this knowl edge held him in its tight-muscled silence for perhaps five minutes. Vaguely he knew that Horsethief Fisher had gone to the door and looked out, and that Paul Champion had not returned with the wood. The room grew chillier. Fisher came back and stood near the cold bar rel stove. Walt Gandy continued to study the brown cigarette paper crushed in his fingers. Helen . . . and Stoddard. A man thirty-five. Owner of the largest out fit next to the C C, and Cameron’s enemy. Only yesterday Pete Kelso of the 77 in offering a short but well-paid Job, had said: "There’s going to be one smashing scramble for public range that the C C con trols. The man I boss for is getting the jump.” The man was Stoddard. And Stoddard had been here today, secretly, with a girl who had fought to keep him from being discovered. “School - kid stuff," Horsethief Fisher had declared. ", . . the thing was ended.” Was it? Through those five minutes Walt Gandy stood in a mood both bitter and hard, piling one grim thought upon another in what seemed for a little while an absolute case against the girl. But in the end he knew he was overlooking one fact. Helen Cameron was no cheat. Gandy twisted his cigarette and bent over the lamp chimney for a light. Horsethief Fisher had once more crossed to the door, opened it and was looking into the dark. His bow legs had carried him on a step outside, when from somewhere on the slope above the bunk house a gun’s sudden crash jarred the deep silence. At the first impact Gandy puffed out the lamp. He straightened up in darkness, one hand slipping out the thirty-eight. He heard Fisher leap into the room. The door remained open, and outside, after the rolling echo of that first explosion had faded "There’s going to be one smash ing scramble for public range that the C C controls.” from the timbered slope, all sounds of every sort were hushed. “Gandy!” “Over here.” Fisher hunched out of the dark. "Come on! You heard where that was from?” "Not exactly.” "The garden patch!” said Fisher’s husky voice. "Where the cook got his!” But Gandy thought otherwise; that the shot had come from higher up, in timber where Powell’s body lay. Moving outside and sliding on rapid ly across open ground beyond the bunk house, he saw that Fisher, close on his left, had strapped a belt holster over blue jeans. A dull glint of gunmetal showed in the bronc rid er’s hand. Fisher’s left hand came out suddenly They stopped. “I dunno,” he whispered, answer ing a questioning turn of Gandy’s head. "Thought I saw something.” Walt was a little in advance. Over his shoulder he said, "Guess not. I’ve been watching. Let’s go on.” Again Horsethief Fisher’s hand groped out of the dark and touched him. Gandy shook his head. They stood facing up the slope. Minutes passed. He could feel Horsethief begin to shift restlessly. To the right of them the barbed wire creaked in a fence post staple. The sound was as abruptly star tling as a shot. Someone was crawl ing through the fence. Gandy turned his head, whisper ing: "Fisher. You wait. Less noise, one at a time. I’ll go.” As he crept on beside the barbed wires his eyes began to pick objects out of what had seemed solid black ness. When a gray blot moved across his vision, soundless as his own forward advance, it took sfrape at once in human form. (TO HF. CONTINUED) At That, JP'e Doubt Ready Answer Saved the Day A certain gentleman was very fond of golf, and of a little re freshment after the game. He ar rived home very late one night, and was met by his wife in the hall. “Well, and what excuse have you got to offer for coming home at this unearthly hour?” she asked angrily. “It was like this, my dear, I was playing golf with some friends and—” “Playing golf!” she cried in dis gust. “Are you trying to tell me you can play golf in the dark?” “Oh, yes, my dear,” he said quickly. “You see, we were using the night clubs.” These Things Endure IF WE work upon marble it will * perish. If we work upon bras£ time will efface it. If we rear temples they will crumble to dust. Bu< if we work upon men’s im mortal minds, if we imbue them with high principles, with the just fear of God and love of their fel low-men, we engrave on those tab lets something which no time can efface, and which will brighten and brighten to a|l eternity.—Dan iel Webster, “Speech in Faneuil Hall,” 1852. I ASK ME O A Quiz With Answer, _ ______ _ _ __ y Ottering Information ANOTHER f on Various Subjects -« The Questions 1. What tragic handicap afflict ed the composer Beethoven? 2. Are all meteorites fiery when they strike the earth? 3. What city in Europe is known as “The Bride of the Adriatic”? 4. Where and when did the tux edo first make its appearance? 5. Are any dogs naturally tail less? 6. Where is frankincense ob tained from? 7. If an army were decimated in battle, what fraction of the men would be lost? 8. In what city are the ruins of the Parthenon? 9. Have diamonds ever been known to explode? 10. Is the beaver a docile ani mal? The Answers 1. Deafness. 2. Although meteorites shoot through the atmosphere in a blaze of fire and are thought to be very hot when they strike the earth, many are actually cold, reveals Collier’s. In fact, one complete ly covered with frost fell in Colby, Wis., on July 4, 1917. 3. Venice. 4. 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