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"I never drew a gun on no Sackett,"

I said, "and I hope you don't fix it so's I have to."

"You could leave out of here," he said. He had a tough, insolent way about him, but he was curious, too, for here we kinfolk had met up away out in California, a far piece from the Tennessee mountains.

"You finally clean out them Higginses?" he asked.

"Tyrel fetched the last one."

"They were fighters. I mind the time two of them had me cornered up on McLean Rock, and me with a bullet in me."

"Was that you? My brother Orrin told me of it. He toted you down off the mountain, piggy-back. Ten, twelve miles."

Dayton was irritated. "We came on business, Nolan. In case you've forgotten."

Nolan ignored him. "Rose Marie Higgins came around on mule back ... one of the Trelawney girls with her. She came to find where those Higginses were so's they could have Christian burial."

"Orrin, he went back up and dug for them both," I said, "and he spoke words over them, and read from the Book. Then he wrote them--their people, that is. He wrote them to tell where the graves were.

"Given time," I said, "we Smoky Mountain and Cumberland Sacketts always bury our dead, we bury them Christian."

"Like out on the Mojave?" Nolan said, wicked-like.

"Wasn't much time," I explained, "and I had a woman with me. Had there been time, I'd have read over them."

"Nolan ..." Dayton was getting almight upset over our talk.

"You came on business," Nolan said, "so get on with it."

"It concerns you!" Dayton declared angrily.

"If anything goes wrong ..."

"I know," Nolan said patiently, "if anything goes wrong I've got to do the fightin'.

That's what I'm paid for. All right, you settle your affairs, and when fightin' time comes around, I'll be there."

"I hope you ain't," I said. "I never read over no Sackett, and I ain't honin' to."

"You tell me where at you keep the Book,"

Nolan said. "I'll be doin' the readin'."

"Come, come, gentlemen!" Old Ben, he looked as cheerful as a 'possum eatin' persimmons. "No business until after we've eaten."

"I hate to spoil your appetite, old man," Dayton said, in that nasty way he had, "but I came to foreclose. I own this ranch."

Glancing across the table, I happened to notice Dorinda. She was looking at those raw, chewed-out hands of Old Ben's like she couldn't believe what she saw.

"Your hands, Mr. Mandrin! You've hurt your hands!"

Chapter Seven.

For a minute there, the roam was as empty of sound as if everybody had suddenly lost their voices, even their power to breathe. Old Ben Mandrin, supposedly moving only from his bed to a chair and back again, had the palms of his hands raked and lacerated like nothing you ever saw. They weren't bandaged ... there was no real need of that, but they were raw and plenty sore.

The question in everybody's mind but mine was, how did they get that way? And the old coot was enjoying it. Why, I don't think he'd had so much fun since the last time he made somebody walk the plank ... if he ever did.

Dayton was studying him, his eyes hot with suspicion, and Oliphant was almighty worried. Nolan Sackett, he just threw a hard look at Old Ben's hands, then at his face, and then Nolan went to eating.

Old Ben gestured carelessly. "It's nothing, Dorinda, don't worry your mind about it."

He looked too self-satisfied to please Dayton. By all Dayton's figuring, the old man should be worried sick and begging for a way out, but there he sat, all smug and smart, those old devil eyes of his brighter than a raccoon's.

Old Ben tied into his food like he'd earned it, and there for a while nobody had anything to say.

Me, I was fair-to-middlin' hungry, but most of all what I needed was sleep. There'd been none the night before, and very little for some time past, and it was going to do my eye and my shooting no good, if it came to that.

When Old Ben sat back to enjoy his coffee he said, "Old man my age doesn't have many pleasures, and what he has he figures to pay for.

"When Dorinda here started being nice to me, and seemed to set her cap for me, I knew something was in the wind. Turner had introduced her to me as his niece, but Turner had never mentioned a niece before, and when she started offering to care for me and the like, I was suspicious.

"Then when Turner asked me for a loan to keep his bank afloat, I gave some thought to it.

He'd loaned me cash a time or two a long while back ... or rather, his father had, and I owed the bank some help.

"Meanwhile, Dorinda was still around the place, fetching and carrying for me of her own free will, making me more comfortable, fixing the blanket over my knees, puffing a pillow back of my head, and moving about the place, swishing her skirts.

"Think that doesn't do a lot for an old man? It did for me. Now, I had no fancy in my mind that she was starting to care for me. Maybe when I was fifty, or even a mite later, but not now; but I could still enjoy her being there and watching her move around.

"You've got to admit she's pretty much of a woman, and she was always the lady. But you've got to admit she keeps what she's got so you know it's there."

He chuckled. "I reckon I'll miss her."

"Get to the point," Dayton said. "I want you out of here ... today."

That Dayton now ... he was a man I could come to dislike.

Old Ben's eyes turned on Dayton like a pair of six-shooters, and he said, "You are to be disappointed, Mr. Dayton. I am not leaving.

You are not taking my property, which is worth fifty times that note I signed for Turner, and which you now hold. You are not taking my property now ... or ever."

He had changed so sudden it startled a body.

Here he was--or seemed to be--a doddering old man talking about a young woman ... and then his tone changed and those old eyes of his changed, and Dayton knew right away that he was facing into trouble.

"What do you mean?" Dayton leaned forward.

"Why, you damned old fool! That note's due and you know it, and I'm granting you no time. Every friend you have who might lend you money is in as bad shape as you are because of this drought! Now you get off this ranch, and get off now!"

That Ben Mandrin was a hard old man. He chuckled, one of the meanest chuckles you ever heard, and he said, "Why, Mr. Dayton, I'm going to surprise you. I'm going to pay you your petty little note ... with interest!"

He reached down under the table, and from between his knees, which had been covered by his blanket, he took a sack that he set out on the table in front of all of us.

"There it is, Mr. Dayton, figured down to the last penny ... and in gold."

When he set that sack down there in the middle of the table we all heard the chink of coins, but Dayton couldn't believe it. He grabbed that sack and jerked it open, spilling those gold coins out on the cloth.

They were gold, all right, and enough to pay off that note, that paltry little sum for which Dayton and Oliphant planned to steal more than a hundred thousand acres of land in one of the loveliest places a body could find.

No, Dayton couldn't believe it. He wouldn't believe it. He knew Old Ben was out of cash. He knew nobody around could afford to loan him money, in his own mind he had already owned the ranch and was thinking of how he could advertise back east and start selling it off, as others were doing.

That black-eyed witch woman looked at the gold, and then she looked across the table at Dayton, and those black eyes were pure poison. "So now, Mr. Dayton," she said coldly, "where do we go from here?"

Roderigo looked as surprised as any of them; only Nolan Sackett seemed to take it without any excitement. He just looked over at Old Ben and said, "All right if I finish eatin' before I go?"