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The Two Cartridges
by
“He is alone,” said Alfred to himself, “so he ain’t in that Black Hank outfit. Ain’t nothin’ to take him north, an’ if he goes south he has to hit way down through the South Fork trail, which same takes him two weeks. Th’ greenbacks in that plunder is numbered, and old Wells-Fargo has th’ numbers. He sure has to pike in an’ change them bills afore he is spotted. So he goes to Pierre.”
Alfred staked his all on this reasoning and rode blindly eastward. Fortunately the roll of the country was sufficiently definite to enable him to keep his general direction well enough until about three o’clock, when the snow ceased and the stars came out, together with the waning moon. Twenty minutes later he came to the bed of a stream.
“Up or down?” queried Alfred, thoughtfully. The state of the weather decided him. It had been blowing all night strongly from the northwest. Left without guidance a pony tends to edge more or less away from the wind, in order to turn tail to the weather. Alfred had diligently counteracted this tendency all night, but he doubted whether, in the hurry of flight, the fugitive had thought of it. Instead of keeping directly east toward Pierre, he had probably fallen away more or less toward the south. “Down,” Alfred decided.
He dismounted from his horse and began to lead the animal parallel to the stream, but about two hundred yards from it, first taking care to ascertain that a little water flowed in the channel. On discovering that there did, he nodded his head in a satisfied manner.
“He doesn’t leave no trail till she begins to snow,” he argued, “an’ he nat’rally doesn’t expect no mud-turkles like me a followin’ of him eastward. Consequently he feeds when he strikes water. This yere is water.”
All of which seemed satisfactory to Alfred. He walked on foot in order to discover the trail in the snow. He withdrew two hundred yards from the bank of the stream that his pony might not scent the other man’s horse, and so give notice of approach by whinnying. After a time he came across the trail. So he left the pony and followed it to the creek-bottom on foot. At the top of the bluff he peered over cautiously.
“Well, you got nerve!” he remarked to himself. “If I was runnin’ this yere game, I’d sure scout with my blinders off.”
The fugitive evidently believed himself safe from pursuit, for he had made camp. His two ponies cropped browse and pawed for grass in the bottom land. He himself had prepared a warm niche and was sleeping in it with only one blanket over him, though by now the thermometer was well down toward zero. The affair had been simple. He had built a long, hot fire in the L of an upright ledge and the ground. When ready to sleep he had raked the fire three feet out from the angle, and had lain down on the heated ground between the fire and the ledge. His rifle and revolver lay where he could seize them at a moment’s notice.
Alfred could stalk a deer, but he knew better than to attempt to stalk a man trained in the West. Instead, he worked himself into a protected position and carefully planted a Winchester bullet some six inches from the man’s ear. The man woke up suddenly and made an instinctive grab toward his weapons.
“Drop it!” yelled Alfred.
So he dropped it, and lay like a rabbit in its form.
“Jest select that thar six-shooter by the end of the bar’l and hurl her from you some,” advised the sheriff. “Now the Win_ches_ter. Now stand up an’ let’s look at you.” The man obeyed. “Yo’ don’t really need that other gun, under th’ circumstances,” pursued the little man. “No, don’t fetch her loose from the holster none; jest unbuckle th’ whole outfit, belt and all. Good! Now, you freeze, and stay froze right whar you are.”