Casey awoke under the vivid impression that some one was driving
a gadget into his skull with a "double-jack." The smell of bacon
scorching filled his very soul with the loathing of food. The
sight of Joe calmly filling his pipe roused Casey to the fighting
mood-- with no power to fight. He was a sick man; and to remain
alive was agony.
The squalid disorder and the stale aroma of a drunken orgy still
pervaded the dugout and made it a nightmare hole to Casey. Hank
came tittering to the bunk and offered him a cup of coffee, muddy
from too long boiling, and Joe grinned over his pipe at the
colorful language with which Casey refused the offering.
"Better take a brace uh hootch," Joe suggested with no more than
his normal ill nature. "I got some over at the still we made
awhile back that, ain't quite so kicky. Been agin' it in wood
an' charcoal. That tones 'er down. I'll go git yuh some after we
eat. Kinda want a brace, myself. That new hootch shore is a
kickin' fool."
Paw accepted this remark, as high praise, and let three hot cakes
burn until their edges curled while he bragged of his skill as a
maker of moonshine. Paw himself was red-eyed and loose-lipped
from yesterday's debauch. Hank's whole face, especially in the
region of his eyes, was puffed unbecomingly. Casey, squinting an
angry eye at Hank and the cup of coffee, spared a thought from
his own misery to acknowledge surprise that anything on earth
could make Hank more unpleasant to look upon. Joe had a sickly
pallor to prove the potency of the brew.
For such is the way of moonshine when fusel oil abounds, as it
does invariably in new whisky distilled by furtive amateurs
working in secret and with neither the facilities nor the
knowledge for its scientific manufacture. There is grim
significance in the sardonic humor of the man who first named it
White Mule. The kick is certain and terrific; frequently it is
fatal as well. The worst of it is, you never know what the
effect will be until you have drunk the stuff; and after you have
drunk it, you are in no condition to resist the effect or to
refrain from courting further disaster.
That is what happened to Casey. The poison in the first
half-pint, swallowed under the eye of Joe's six-shooter, upset
his judgment. The poison in his further potations made a wholly
different man of Casey Ryan; and the after effect was so terrific
that he would have swallowed cyanide if it promised relief.
He gritted his teeth and suffered tortures until Joe returned and
gave him a drink of whisky in a chipped granite cup. Almost
immediately he felt better. The pounding agony in his head eased
perceptibly and his nerves ceased to quiver. After a while he
sat up, gazed longingly at the water bucket and crawled down from
the bunk. He drank largely in great gulps. His bloodshot eyes
strayed meditatively to the coffee pot. After an undecided
moment he walked uncertainly to the stove and poured himself a
cup of coffee.
Casey lifted the cup to drink, but the smell of it under his nose
sickened him. He weaved uncertainly to the door, opened it and
threw out the coffee--cup and all. Which was nature flying a
storm flag, had any one with a clear head been there to observe
the action and the look on Casey's face.
"Gimme another shot uh that damn' hootch," he growled. Joe
pushed the bottle toward Casey, eyeing him curiously.
"That stuff they run yesterday shore is kicky," Joe ruminated
sympathetically. "Pap's proud as pups over it. He thinks it's
the real article--but I dunno. Shore laid yuh out, Casey, an'
yuh never got much, neither. Not enough t' lay yuh out the way
it did. Y' look sick."
"I am sick!" Casey snarled, and poured himself a drink more
generous than was wise. "When Casey Ryan says he's sick, you can
put it down he's sick! He don't want nobody tellin' 'im whether
'e's sick 'r not. --he knows 'e's sick!" He drank, and swore
that it was rotten stuff not fit for a hawg (which was absolute
truth). Then he staggered to the stove, picked up the coffee
pot, carried it to the door and flung it savagely outside because
the odor offended him.
"Mart got back last night," Joe announced casually. "You was dead
t' the world. But we told 'im you was all right, an' I guess he
aims t' give yuh steady work an' a cut-in on the deal. We been
cleanin' up purty good money--but Mart says the market ain't what
it was; too many gone into the business. You're a good cook an'
a good miner an' a purty good feller all around--only the boss
says you'll have t' cut out the booze."
"'J you tell 'im you made me drink it?" Casey halted in the
middle of the floor, facing Joe indignantly.
"I told 'im I put it up t' yuh straight--what your business is,
an' all. You got no call t' kick--didn't I go swipe this bottle
uh booze for yuh t' sober up on, soon as the boss's back was
turned? I knowed yuh needed it; that's why. We all needed it.
I'm just tellin' yuh the boss don't approve of no celebrations
like we had yest'day. I got up early an' hauled that burro outa
sight 'fore he seen it. That's how much a friend I be, an' it
wouldn't hurt yuh none to show a little gratitude!"
"Gratitude, hell! A lot I got in life t' be grateful for!"
Casey slumped down on the nearest bench, laid his injured hand
carefully on the table and leaned his aching head on the other
while he discoursed bitterly on the subject of his wrongs.
His muddled memory fumbled back to his grievance against traffic
cops, distorting and magnifying the injustice he had received at
their hands. He had once had a home, a wife and a fortune, he
declared, and what had happened? Laws and cops had driven him
out, had robbed him of his home and his family and sent him out
in the hills like a damned kiotey, hopin' he'd starve to death.
And where, he asked defiantly, was the gratitude in that?
He told Joe ramblingly but more or less truthfully how he had
been betrayed and deserted by a man he had befriended; one Barney
Oakes, upon whom Casey would like to lay his hands for a minute.
"What I done to the burro ain't nothin' t' what I'd do t' that
hound uh hell!" he declared, pounding the table with his good
fist.
Homeless, friendless; but Joe was his friend, and Paw and Hank
were his friends--and besides them there was in all the world not
one friend of Casey Ryan's. They were good friends and good
fellows, even if they did put too much hoot in their hootch.
Casey Ryan liked his hootch with a hoot in it.
He was still hooting (somewhat incoherently it is true, with
recourse now and then to the bottle because he was sick and he
didn't give a darn who knew it) when the door opened and he whom
they called Mart walked in. Joe introduced him to Casey, who sat
still upon the bench and looked him over with drunken
disparagement. Casey had a hazy recollection of wanting to see
the boss and have it out with him, but he could not recall what
it was that he had been so anxious to quarrel about.
Mart was a slender man of middle height, with thin, intelligent
face and a look across the eyes like the old woman who rocked in
the stone hut. He glanced from the bottle to Casey, eyeing him
sharply. Drunk or sober, Casey was not the man to be stared
down; nevertheless his fingers strayed involuntarily to his shirt
collar and pulled fussily at the wrinkles.
"So you're the man they've been holding here for my inspection,"
Mart said coolly, with a faint smile at Casey's evident
discomfort. "You're still hitting it up, I see. Joe, take that
bottle away from him. When he's sober enough to talk straight,
I'll give him the third degree and see what he really is, anyway.
Guess he's all right--but he sure can lap up the booze. That's a
point against him."
Casey's hand went to the bottle, beating Joe's by three inches.
He did not particularly want the whisky, but it angered him to
hear Mart order it taken from him. Away back in his mind where
reason had gone into hiding, Casey knew that some great injustice
was being done him; that he, Casey Ryan, was not the man they
were calmly taking it for granted that he was.
With the bottle in his hand he rose and walked unsteadily to his
bunk. He did not like this man they called the boss. He
remembered that in his bunk, under the bedding, he had concealed
something that would make him the equal of them all. He fumbled
under the blankets, found what he sought and with his back turned
to the others he slipped the thing into his sling out of sight.
Mart and Joe were talking together by the table, paying no
attention to Casey, who was groggily making up his mind to crawl
into his bunk and take another sleep. He still meant to have it
out with Mart, but he did not feel like tackling the job just
now.
Mart turned to the door and Joe got up to follow him, with a
careless glance over his shoulder at Casey, who was lifting a
foot as if it weighed a great deal, and was groping with it in
the air trying to locate the edge of the lower bunk. Joe
laughed, but the laugh died in his throat, choked off suddenly by
what he saw when Mart pulled open the door.
Casey turned suspiciously at the laugh and the sound of the door
opening. He swung round and steadied himself with his back
against the bunk when he saw Mart and Joe lift their hands and
hold them there, palms outward, a bit higher than their heads.
Something in the sight enraged Casey unreasoningly. A flick of
the memory may have carried him back to the old days in the
mining camps when Casey drove stage and hold-ups were frequent.
"What 'r yuh tryin' to pull on me now?" he bawled, and rushed
headlong toward them, pushing them forcibly out into the open
with a collision of his body against Joe. Outside, a voice
harshly commanded him to throw up his hands--and it was then that
Casey Ryan's Irish fighting blood boiled and bubbled over.
Unconsciously he pushed his hat forward over one eye, drew back
his lips in a fighting grin, stepped down off the low doorsill
with a lurch that nearly sent him sprawling and went weaving
belligerently toward a group of five men whose attitude was
anything but conciliatory.
"Casey Ryan! I'm dogged if it ain't Casey!" exclaimed a familiar
voice in the group, whereat the others looked astonished. Through
his slits of swollen lids Casey glared toward the voice and
recognized Barney Oakes, grinning at him with what Casey
considered a Judas treachery. He saw two men step away from Joe
and the boss, leaving them in handcuffs.
"Take them irons off'n my friends!" bellowed Casey as he charged.
"Whadda yuh think you're doin', anyway? Take 'em off! It's
Casey Ryan that's tellin' yuh, an' yuh better heed what he says,
before you're tore from limb to limb!"
"B-but, Casey! This 'ere's a shurf's possy!" The voice of
Barney rose in a protesting 'squawk. "I brung 'em all the way
over here to your rescue! They brung a cor'ner to view your
remains! Don't you know your pardner, Barney Oakes?
"Ah-h--I know yuh think I don't? I know yuh to a fare-yuh-well!
Brung a cor'ner, did yuh? Tha's all right--goin' t' need a
cor'ner-but he won't set on Casey Ryan's remains--you c'n ask
anybody if any cor'ners ever set on Casey Ryan yit! Naw." Casey
snarled as contemptuously as was possible to a man in his
condition. "No cor'ner ever set on Casey Ryan, an' he ain't goin'
to!"
The men glanced questioningly at one another. One laughed. He
was a large, smooth-jowled man inclined to portliness, and his
laugh vibrated his entire front contagiously so that the others
grinned and took it for granted that Casey Ryan was a comedy
element introduced unexpectedly where they had thought to find
him a tragedy.
"No, you're a pretty lively man for me to sit on; I admit it,"
the portly man remarked. "I'm the coroner, and it looks as if I
wouldn't sit, this trip."
Casey eyed him blearily, not in the least mollified but instead
swinging to a certain degree of lucidity that was nevertheless
governed largely by the hoot he had swallowed in the hootch.
"There's part of a burro 'round here some'er's you c'n set on,"
Casey informed him grimly, and fumbled in his coat pocket for his
pipe. He drew it out empty, looked at it and returned it to his
pocket. One who knew Casey intimately would have detected a
hidden purpose in his manner. The warning was faint, indefinable
at best, and difficult to picture in words. One might say that
an intimate acquaintance would have detected a false note in
Casey's defiance. His manner was restrained just when violence
would have been more natural.
"Damn a pipe," Casey grumbled with drunken petulance. "Anybody
got a cigarette? I'm single-handed an' I ain't able t' roll
'em."
It was the coroner himself who handed Casey a "tailor-made."
Casey nodded glumly, accepted a match and lighted the cigarette
almost as if he were sober. He looked the group over
noncommittally, eyed again the handcuffs on Mart and Joe, sent a
veiled glance toward Barney Oakes and turned away. He still held
the center of the stage. Fully expecting to find him dead, the
sheriff and his men were slow to adjust themselves to the fact
that he was very much alive and very drunk and apparently not
greatly interested in his rescue.
Casey halted in his unsteady progress toward the dugout. The
sheriff was already questioning his two prisoners about other
members of the gang; but he looked up when Casey lifted up his
voice and spoke his mind of the moment.
"Brung a cor'ner, did yuh, lookin' for some one to set on!
Barney Oakes is the man that'll need a cor'ner in a minute.
You're all goin' to need 'im. Casey Ryan never stood around yit
whilst his friends was hobbled up by a shurf--turn 'em loose an'
turn 'em loose quick! An' git back away from Barney Oakes so he
won't drop on yuh in chunks--I'll fix 'im for yuh to set on!"
His hand had gone up to his cigarette, but only Joe knew what was
likely to follow. Joe gave a yell of warning, ducked and ran
straight away from the group. The sheriff yelled also and gave
chase. The group was broken--luckily--just as Casey heaved
something in that direction.
"I blowed up a jackass yesterday when they thought I couldn't
--I'll blow up a bunch of 'em to-day! Yuh c'n set on what's left
uh Barney Oakes!"
The explosion scattered dirt and small stones--and the sheriff's
posse. Casey sent one malevolent glance over his shoulder as he
stumbled into the dugout.
"Missed 'im!" he grumbled disgustedly to himself when he saw no
fragments of Barney falling. His ferociousness, like the
dynamite, annihilated itself with the explosion. "Missed 'im!
Casey Ryan's gittin' old; old an' sick an' a damn' fool. Missed
'im with the last shot--drunk--drunk an' don't give a darn!"
He slammed the door shut behind him, pushed his hat forward so
violently that it rested on the bridge of his nose, and wabbled
over to his bunk. This time his foot found the edge of the lower
bunk, and he scratched and clawed his way up and rolled in upon
the blankets.
He was asleep and snoring when the sheriff, edging his way in as
if he were an animal trainer's apprentice entering the lion's
cage, sneaked on his toes to the bunk and slipped the handcuffs
on Casey.