Mack Nolan had just crawled into his bunk on Wednesday night when
he thought he heard a car laboring up the gulch. He sat up in
bed to listen and then got hurriedly into his clothes. He was
standing just around the corner of the dugout where the
headlights could not reach him, when Casey killed the engine and
stopped before the door. Steam was rising in a small cloud from
the radiator cap, and the sound of boiling water was distinctly
audible some distance away.
Mack Nolan waited until Casey had climbed out from behind the
wheel and headed for the door. Then he stepped out and hailed
him. Casey started perceptibly, whirling as if to face an enemy.
When he saw that it was Nolan he apparently lost his desire to
enter the cabin. Instead he came close to Nolan and spoke in a
hoarse whisper.
"We better run 'er under the shed, Mr. Nolan, and drain the
darned radiator. I dunno am I follered or not, but I was awhile
back. But the man that catches Casey Ryan when he's on the trail
an' travelin, has yet t' be born. An' you can ask anybody if
that ain't so."
Mack Nolan's eyes narrowed. "And who followed you then?" he
asked quietly. "Did you bring any hootch?"
"Did yuh send Casey Ryan after hootch, or was it mebby spuds er
somethin'?" Casey retorted with heavy dignity. "Will yuh pack
it in, Mr. Nolan, whilst I back the car in the shed, or shall I
bring it when I come? It ain't so much," he added drily, "but
it cost the trouble of a trainload."
"I'll take it in," said Nolan. "If any one does come we want no
evidence in reach."
Casey turned to the car, clawed at his camp outfit and lifted out
a demijohn which he grimly handed to Nolan. "Fer many a mile it
rode on the seat with me so I could drink 'er down if they got me
cornered," he grinned. "One good swaller is about the size of
it, Mr. Nolan."
Nolan grinned in sympathy and turned into the cabin, bearing the
three-gallon, wicker-covered glass bottle in his arms. Presently
he returned to the doorway and stood there listening down the
gulch until Casey came up, walking from the shed.
"'Tis a good thing yuh left this other car standin' here cold an'
peaceful, Mr. Nolan," Casey, observed, after he also had stood
for a minute listening. "If they're follerin' they'll be here
darn' soon. If they ain't I've ditched 'em. Let's git t' bed an'
I'll tell yuh my tale uh woe."
Without a word Nolan led the way into the cabin. In the dark
they undressed and got into the bed which was luckily wide enough
for two.
"Had your supper?" Nolan asked belatedly when they were settled.
"I did not," Casey grunted. "I will say, Mr. Nolan, there's few
times in my life when you'd see Casey Ryan missin' 'is supper
whilst layin' tracks away from a fight. But if it was light
enough you could gaze upon 'im now. And I must hand it t' the
Gallopin' Gussie yuh give me the loan of fer the trip. She brung
me home ahead of the sheriff--and you can ask anybody if Casey
Ryan himself can't be proud uh that!"
"The sheriff?" Nolan's voice was puzzled. He seemed to be
considering something for a minute, before he spoke again. "You
could have explained to the sheriff, couldn't you, your reason
for having booze in the car?"
Casey raised to one elbow. "When yuh told Casey Ryan 'twas not
many men you'd trust, and that you trusted me an' the business
was t' be secret--Mr. Nolan, you 'was talkin' t' Casey Ryan!" He
lay down again as if that precluded further argument.
"Good! I thought I hadn't made a mistake in my man," Nolan
approved, in a tone that gave Casey an inner glow of pride in
himself. "Let's have the story, old man. Did you see Bill
Masters?"
"Bill Masters," said Casey grimly, "was not in Lund. His garage
is sold an, Bill's in Denver--which is a long drive for a Ford t'
git there an, back before Friday midnight. Yuh put a time limit
me, Mr. Nolan, an' nobody had Bill's address. I didn't foller
Bill t' Denver. I asked some others in Lund if they knowed a man
named Kenner, and they did not. So then I went huntin' booze
that I could git without the hull of Nevada knowin' it in fifteen
minutes. An' Casey's got this t' say: When yuh want hootch. it's
hard t' find as free gold in granite. When yuh don't want it,
it's forced on yuh at the point of a gun. This jug I
stole--seein' your business is private, Mr. Nolan.
"I grabbed it off some fellers I knowed in Lund an' never had no
use for, anyway. They're mean enough when they're sober, an'
when they're jagged they're not t' be mentioned on a Sunday. I
mighta paid 'em for it, but money's no good t' them fellers an'
there's no call t' waste it. So they made a holler and I sets
the jug down an' licks them both, an' comes along home mindin' my
own business.
"So I guess they 'phoned the sheriff in Vegas that here comes a
bootlegger and land 'im quick. Anyway, I was goin' t' stop there
an' take on a beefsteak an' a few cups uh coffee, but I never
done it. I was slowin' down in front uh Sam's Place when a
friend uh mine gives me the high sign t' put 'er in high an' keep
'er goin'. Which I done.
"Down by Ladd's, Casey looks back an' here comes the sheriff's
car hell bent fer 'lection (anyway it looked like the sheriff's
car). An' I wanta say right here, Mr. Nolan, that's a darn' good
Ford yuh got! I was follered, and 'I was follered hard. But I'm
here an' they' ain't--an' you can ask anybody if that didn't take
some going'!"
In the darkness of the cabin Casey turned over and heaved a great
sigh. On the heels of that came a chuckle.
"I got t' hand it t' the L. A. traffic cops, Mr. Nolan. They
shore learned me a lot about dodgin'. So now yuh got the hull
story. If it was the sheriff behind me an' if he trails me here,
they got no evidence an' you can mebby square it with 'im. You'd
know what t' tell 'im--which is more'n what Casey Ryan can say."
Casey fell asleep immediately afterward, but Mack Nolan lay for a
long while with his eyes wide open and his ears alert for strange
sounds in the gulch. He was a new man in this district, working
independently of sheriff's offices. Casey Ryan was the first man
he had confided in; all others were fair game for Nolan to prove
honest or dishonest with the government. The very nature of his
business made it so. For when whisky runners drove openly in
broad daylight through the country with their unlawful loads,
somewhere along the line officers of the law were sharing the
profits. Nolan knew none of them,--by sight. If he carried the
records of some safely memorized and pigeonholed for future use,
that was his own business. Mack Nolan's thoughts were his own and
he guarded them jealously and slept with his lips tightly closed.
He wanted no sheriff coming to him for explanation of his
movements. Wherefore he listened long, and when he slept his
slumber was light.
At daylight he was up and abroad. Two hours after sunrise Casey
awoke with the smell of breakfast in his nostrils. He rolled
over and blinked at Mack Nolan standing with his hat on the back
of his head and a cigarette between his lips, calmly turning
three hot-cakes with a kitchen knife. Casey grinned
condescendingly. He himself turned his cakes by the simple
process of tossing them in the air a certain kind of flip, and
catching them dexterously as they came down. Right there he
decided that Mack Nolan was not after all a real outdoors man.
"Well, the sheriff didn't arrive last night," Nolan observed
cheerfully, when he saw that Casey was awake. "I don't much look
for him, either. Your driving on past the turn to Juniper Wells
and coming up that other old road very likely threw him off the
track. You must have been close to the State line then and he
gave you up as a bad job."
"It was a good job!" Casey maintained reaching for his clothes.
"I made 'em think I was headed clean outa the country. If they
knowed who it was at all, they'd know I belong in L. A., and I
figured they'd guess I was headed there. They stopped for
something this side of Searchlight an' so I pulls away from 'em a
couple of miles. They never seen where I went to."
While he washed for breakfast, Casey began to take stock of
certain minor injuries.
"That darned Pete Gibson has got tushes in his mouth like a wild
hawg; the kind that sticks out," he grumbled, touching certain
skinned places on his knuckles. "Every time I landed on 'im
yesterday I run against them tushes uh his'n." But he added with
a grin, "They ain't so solid as they was when I met up with 'im.
I felt one of 'em give 'fore I got through."
"Brings the price of moonshine up a bit, doesn't it?" Nolan
suggested drily. "I rather think you might better have paid the
men their price. A fight is well enough in its way--I'm Irish
myself. But as my agent, Ryan, the main idea is to let the law
fight for you. Our work is merely to give the law a chance. I
like your not wanting to explain to the sheriff. Prohibition
officers do not explain, as a rule. The law behind them does
that.
"And since the price seems to be rather hard on the knuckles--"
He glanced down at Casey's hands and grinned"--I think it may
come cheaper to make the stuff ourselves. Licking two men for
three gallons, and getting the officers at your tail light into
the bargain, is all right as an experiment; but I don't believe,
Ryan, we ought to adopt that as a habit.
Casey cocked an eye up at him. "Did yuh ever make White Mule,
Mr. Nolan? he asked grimly.
Nolan laughed his easy little chuckle. "Why, no, Ryan, I never
did. Did you?"
"Naw. I seen some made once, but I had too much of it inside me
at the time to learn the receipt for it. I'd rather steal it, if
it's all the same to you, Mr. Nolan." His hand went up to the
back of his head and moved forward, although there was no hat to
push. "I've lived honest all these years--an', dammit, it's kinda
tough to break out with stealin I what yuh don't want! Couldn't
we fill them bottles with somethin' that looks like hootch? Cold
tea should get by, Mr. Nolan. It'd be a fine joke on Smilin'
Lou."
"A good joke, maybe--but no evidence. It isn't against the law,
Ryan, to have cold tea in your possession. No, it's got to be
whisky, and there's got to be a load of it. Enough to look like
business and tempt him or any other member of the gang you happen
to meet. If they caught you with three gallons, Casey, they'd
probably run you in and feel very virtuous about it. Nothing for
it, I'm afraid. We'll have to become real moonshiners ourselves
for awhile."
Casey ate with less appetite after that. Making moonshine did
not appeal to him at all. Given his choice, I think he would
even prefer drinking it, unhappy as the effect had been on him.
"We'll need a still, and we'll need the stuff. I'm going to
leave you in charge of the camp, Ryan, while I make a trip to
Needles. I'll deputize you to assist me in cleaning up this
district. And this district, Ryan, touches salt water. So if
revenge looks good to you, you'll have a fine chance to get even
with the bootleggers. And in the meantime, just kill time around
camp here while I'm gone. If any one shows up, you're
prospecting."
That day, doubt-devils took hold of Casey Ryan and plucked at his
belief. How did he know that Mack Nolan wasn't another
bootlegger, wanting to rope Casey in on a job for some fell
purpose of his own? He had Mack Nolan's word and nothing more.
For that matter, he had also had young Kenner's word. Kenner had
fooled him completely. Mack Nolan could also fool him--perhaps.
"Well, anyhow, he never claimed to know Bill Masters, and that's
a point in 'is favor. And if it's some dirty work he's up to, he
coulda made it shorter than what he's doin'. An' if he's
double-crossin' Casey Ryan--well, anyway, Casey Ryan 'll be
present at the time an' place when he does it!"
Upon that comforting thought, Casey decided to trust Mack Nolan
until he caught him playing crooked; and proceeded to kill time
as best he could.