It may seem a daring thing for one man to stop a stage full of
passengers, and require them to surrender their money and valuables,
but this has been done time and again in unsettled portions of the
West. For the most part the stage passengers are taken by surprise,
and the road agent is known to be a desperado, ready to murder in
cold blood anyone who dares oppose him.
In the present instance, however, the passengers had been warned of
their danger and were ready to meet it.
Brown--for, of course, the masked man was the landlord--saw four
revolvers leveled at him from inside the stage.
"Let go that horse, my friend, or you are a dead man!" said Conrad
Stiefel, calmly. "Two can play at your game."
Brown was taken by surprise, but he was destined to be still more
astonished.
Col. Warner protruded his head from the window, saying:
"Yes, my friend, you had better give up your little plan. It won't
work."
Such language from his confederate, on whom he fully relied, wholly
disconcerted the masked robber.
"Well, I'll be blowed!" he muttered, staring, in ludicrous
perplexity, at his fellow conspirator.
"Yes, my friend," said the colonel, "I shall really be under the
necessity of shooting you myself if you don't leave us alone. We are
all armed and resolute. I think you had better defer your little
scheme."
Brown was not quick-witted. He did not see that his confederate was
trying cunningly to avert suspicion from himself, and taking the
only course that remained to him. Of course, he thought he was
betrayed, and was, as a natural consequence, exasperated.
He released his hold on the horses, but, fixing his eyes on the
colonel fiercely, muttered:
"Wait till I get a chance at you! I'll pay you for this."
"What an idiot!" thought Warner, shrugging his shoulders. "Why can't
he see that I am forced to do as I am doing? I must make things
plain to him."
He spoke a few words rapidly in Spanish, which Brown evidently
understood. His face showed a dawning comprehension of the state of
affairs, and he stood aside while the stage drove on.
"What did you say?" asked Conrad Stiefel, suspiciously.
"You heard me, sir," said the colonel, loftily. "You owe your rescue
from this ruffian to me. Now, you can understand how much you have
misjudged me."
Conrad Stiefel was not so easily satisfied of this.
"I heard what you said in Mexican, or whatever lingo it is, but I
didn't understand it."
"Nor I," said Benson.
"Very well, gentlemen; I am ready to explain. I told this man that
if he ever attempted to molest me I should shoot him in his track."
"Why didn't you speak to him in English?" asked Stiefel.
"Because I had a suspicion that the fellow was the same I met once
in Mexico, and I spoke to him in Spanish to make sure. As he
understood, I am convinced I was right."
"Who is it, then?" asked Benson.
"His name, sir, is Manuel de Cordova, a well-known Mexican bandit,
who seems to have found his way to this neighborhood. He is a
reckless desperado, and, though I addressed him boldly, I should be
very sorry to meet him in a dark night."
This explanation was very fluently spoken, but probably no one
present believed what the colonel said, or exonerated him from the
charge which George Melville had made against him.
Five miles further on Col. Warner left the stage.
"Gentlemen," he said, "I am sorry to leave this pleasant company,
but I have a mining claim in this neighborhood, and must bid you
farewell. I trust that when you think of me hereafter, you will
acquit me of the injurious charges which have been made against me.
I take no credit to myself for driving away the ruffian who stopped
us, but hope you won't forget it."
"No one interfered with the colonel when he proposed to leave the
stage. Indeed, the passengers were unanimous in accepting his
departure as a relief. In spite of his plausible representations, he
was regarded with general suspicion.
"I wish I knew the meaning of that Spanish lingo," said the German,
Conrad Stiefel.
"I can interpret it for you, Mr. Stiefel," said George Melville,
quietly. "I have some knowledge of Spanish."
"What did he say?" asked more than one, eagerly.
"He said: 'You fool! Don't you see the plot has been discovered? It
wasn't my fault. I will soon join you and explain.'"
This revelation made a sensation.
"Then he was in league with the road agent, after all?" said Parker.
"Certainly he was. Did you for a moment doubt it?" said Melville.
"I was staggered when I saw him order the rascal away."
"He is a shrewd villain!" said Benson. "I hope we shan't encounter
him again."