

                          A MUNICIPAL FEUD

                          By ERNEST HAYCOX

        Author of “Bound South,” “Starlight and Gunflame” etc.


        WHEN ONE DESCRIBES A DESERT TOWN TO ITS ENTHUSIASTIC
        INHABITANTS AS A “SHRIVELLED UP GOPHER HOLE,” PERHAPS IT
        IS JUST AS WELL TO PUT YOURSELF RIGHT WITH THEM LATER ON
        BY STAYING FOR THEIR FIGHT WITH THE RIVAL METROPOLIS,
        WHICH, IT WAS FELT, WOULD STEAL ANYTHING THAT WASN’T
        RIVETED TO THE LANDSCAPE. BUT WHEN STEPS COME TO BE
        TAKEN FOR CIVIC HARMONY, THEN’S THE TIME TROUBLE IS
        HELL-BENT AROUND THE CORNER--SO TWO WELL-TRIED PARTNERS
        DRIFTED SOUTH


Joe Breedlove and his newly-found partner, Indigo Bowers, halted on
the ridge to survey the country below and beyond them. The chariot
of dawn thundered out of the east and every peak and bluff stood in
clear outline, flaming with the careless interweaving of the raw
primary colors; silver sparkled along the creek bottoms, scarlet and
chrome ran side by side on the butte faces. Away in the remote
distance a bright blue sky fused with the earth’s dun margin. It was
like a bird’s-eye map splashed with pigment and Joe’s eyes kindled
at the sight of so much prodigal beauty.

“Providence rises, and the earth is filled with light,” he murmured,
rolling a brown paper cigarette.

“It just looks like another hot day to me,” grumbled Indigo Bowers.
Indigo was a thin, undersized bundle of nerves. Upon his wizened
face--where little wrinkling crow’s feet loved to dwell--was an abiding
distrust of the world as he found it. His past life was a page written
with the red ink of battle, feud and sudden violence, for Indigo was
constitutionally unable to keep out of a quarrel, whether of his own
making or somebody else’s.

“Take the beam out o’ yore eye, Indigo,” said Joe, smiling. No man on
earth could withstand that smile; it was the shrewd, tolerant smile of
a man who very well knew how devious were the ways of a wicked world
and yet would not let that knowledge sour him. Joe Breedlove was tall
and lean and as bronzed as the cigarette papers which came attached to
his sack of smokin’ tobacco. The hair showing beneath his Stetson was
prematurely silvered, his eyes were quite blue and mirroring an
easygoing philosophy of existence.

“I ain’t got nothin’ in my eyes but sand an’ gravel,” retorted Indigo,
“and I’ve swallered enough alkali water to corrode a boiler.”

They were a strangely mated pair and the wonder of all wonders was
that they managed to endure each other. Joe Breedlove had met Indigo a
month back on the trail when Indigo was in one of his characteristic
difficulties--being chased by a posse. Joe had helped him out of it
and a little later had in turn been given an assisting hand by Indigo.
After that some chemical affinity had drawn them together. And for a
month they had ridden southward, bound nowhere in particular, with
nothing much in their minds.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Joe Breedlove stretched a long arm to the southeast. “Over yonder is
a town. I was raised in it. There’s a piece of business I’ve got to
finish up. Let’s ride.”

“Wait a minute,” said Indigo. “What town is it?”

“Big Elk.”

Indigo shook his head decisively. “I can’t go there.”

“Why not?” asked Joe.

“I was there once,” explained Indigo, and for some reason he felt
called upon to draw his pointed features into a poker expression. He
saw Joe grinning at him and he flared up. “Laugh, you idiot! You know
blamed well I’m a peaceful man. I nev’ do butt my head into trouble
unless I’m invited. But it is shorely funny how folks pick on me.”

“Well, that makes the fifth town hand-runnin’ we’ve had to circle
because you’d been in ’em before,” mused Joe Breedlove. “If this keeps
up we’ll have to go east o’ the Mississippi. It’s a mercy how you can
develop friction in these municipal corporations. They see you an’ they
start shootin’.”

“I’m not a hand to be picked on,” started Indigo with dignity.

“Guess we’ve got to separate for a couple days, then,” decided Joe.
“I’ve got a chore to finish in Big Elk. Supposin’ I meet you here two
sleeps from now?”

“If it’s a fight you aim to finish,” began Indigo wistfully, “I wouldn’t
mind travellin’ along with you----”

“No, it’s peaceful.”

“All right, then,” decided Indigo. “Two sleeps from now, at this very
spot. I’ll mosey around somewhere and fill up on ham an’ eggs.”

Joe Breedlove turned down the ridge side. “Try to keep out of trouble,
Indigo.”

“I won’t start nothin’,” promised Indigo. “But I won’t avoid nothin’,
either.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

The last part of the sentence was mumbled to Indigo’s own self. He
watched Joe descend the slope and thread a patch of pines; then he
turned toward the east and began a day’s wandering across a series of
blistering hot upland pastures. At noon he stopped to eat a cold snack
and inhale a brown paper cigarette, feeling somewhat bereaved. After
this, he forged on, his horse casting longer shadows to the fore. And
in that gloaming hour betwixt sunset and dark he sighted the scattered
lights of a town bearing a little to his starboard quarter. He tacked
and drifted down upon a street-end, stopping in the shadows. There was
something Napoleonic in the manner he sat on his horse and memorized
the relative positions of the livery stable, the hotel, the restaurant
and the saloon--as well as the second-story porches and those little
niches of darkness wherein a man might find shelter in time of stress.

“Well,” said he, advancing on the restaurant, “mebbe nothin’ will
happen.”

He posted his horse and went inside, ordering a goodly portion of those
comestibles which had haunted his imagination during the past month of
wandering. He also ordered a brace of eggs--but he didn’t eat them. He
merely summoned them out of the kitchen so that he might not forget what
eggs looked like. The rest of the meal vanished and was duly paid for,
though Indigo never got so engrossed in his feeding as not to observe
certain other patrons closely examining him. It was not a new experience
to Indigo; he stared grimly at the bottom of his coffee cup and reminded
himself that Joe had bade him be peaceful. Having polished off a second
mug of coffee, he repaired to the sidewalk and aimed his footsteps
toward the mellow lights of the saloon.

“It don’t tickle my humor none to be gawped at,” he grumbled.

“Just a minute, brother.”

He had arrived in front of the saloon. A pair of fellows slipped through
the shadows, flanking him. He saw others standing on the porch, watching
this move.

“Step inside a minute. We’d like to pass a few words.”

“My time is my own,” stated Indigo, with commendable restraint. “If you
got anything on yore chest, boost it off.”

“Step inside.”

“Why should I?”

“Why shouldn’t yuh?” Something unmistakably metallic kissed Indigo’s
backbone. Always recognizing the moral force of the drop, Indigo
stoked his temper with a few inflammable thoughts and passed into the
hotel room, to be quickly surrounded by a small crowd. One particular
individual with General Grant whiskers and a pair of gimlet eyes
addressed him bluntly. “Where you from?”

                   *       *       *       *       *

This sort of thing touched Indigo to the quick. “You kinda annoy me,”
said he. “Yore eyes interfere and yore nose is too short to reach into
my business. Back up.”

The self-elected spokesman worked his jaws for a moment and looked
significantly about. “It won’t help you none to stir up the vinegar,”
he warned Indigo. “I’m askin’ you once more--where you from?”

Indigo cocked his head at an angle and began nodding it from side to
side as the words poured out of him. “Listen, Albert, I’ve rode into
better towns than this, but I don’t recolleck havin’ entered any
worser ones. You gents think yore pretty smart, picking on a stranger
thisaway. Jus’ let me assert yore tamperin’ with high explosives.
I’ll pull this shebang to its rotten foundations an’ let in a little
air, which is some badly needed. You make me sick. What’s the name of
this shrivelled up gopher hole?”

“That’s what I thought,” boomed the inquisitor. “You got a lot of brass,
comin’ over here from Big Elk to spy us out! All right, boys, we’ll hang
a few signs on ’im and send ’im back with our compliments!”

“You shore will suffer from plague and sudden decimation if you do,”
stated Indigo severely. He saw that this agitated the crowd, which was
curious, considering he had spoken only the literal truth. Civic pride
was an unreasonable thing. “Just another imitation town,” he continued.
“_I_ ain’t from Big Elk if that will help you any. The farther south I
rides the worse these corporate junk heaps get. What’re you so daggone
proud about? I don’t see nothin’ to stimulate me none.”

The spokesman stepped forward, shaking his finger. “You’ll be
humble----”

He was shoved aside by another man, who looked searchingly at Indigo.
“Listen, ain’t yore name Indigo Bowers?”

“Yeah,” agreed Indigo sourly.

The new spokesman grinned. “Thought so. You was the fella that wrecked
the Gloria saloon over at Big Elk, three years ago July.”

“Well, they tried to pick on me,” grumbled Indigo. “I ain’t the kind to
stand that.”

The man turned to his partners. “We got him wrong. He ain’t no Big Elk
boy.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

The atmosphere clarified instantly. Any man who had done property
damage to Big Elk was among friends. They said as much; they shook
his hand, they slapped him fraternally on the back. Indigo thawed,
his volatile anger departed. “Well,” said he, “Mebbe I was harsh.
Jus’ a mistake. I can see yo’re gentlemen o’ parts. What’s the name
o’ this thrivin’, hospitable little city?”

“Jingle Bell.”

“And I takes it Big Elk has done you injury? Mebbe you’d like to return
the same? Uhuh, the story is familiar to me. I nev’ took no stock in Big
Elk myself.” He veered toward the gimlet-eyed gentleman who hung aloof,
nursing suspicion. “What’s yore name, mister?”

“Gabe Wales. I ain’t ashamed to announce my handle.”

“Neither’m I,” was Indigo’s over-prompt answer. “Only, I’m modest.”

Somebody discerned that the cordial atmosphere was about to be
dissipated and stepped in to prevent it. “Let’s all amble over to the
Geyser an’ gild the lily. Any man that can deflate a little hot air
from that cross between a hog-waller and a rabbit hutch known as Big
Elk is certainly deservin’ of----”

The speech was neatly sheared in the middle by a high screech and the
accent of a revolver shot. A cavalcade poured through the street, the
furies broke loose; guns flamed, the hotel windows tinkled with
breaking glass. To a man the cohorts of Jingle Bell rushed toward the
exits of the hostelry and moved in the direction of the Geyser, which
seemed to be the point of attack.

Indigo stood alone, greatly agitated with conflicting emotions. The
sound of battle rang up and down the narrow thoroughfare, the smell of
burnt powder was in the air. Indigo sniffed it and shook his head. It
seemed a shame for him to be idle. “I’d ought to lend a hand. Still,
nobody invited me.”

There was a noise in the adjacent dining room and presently Gabe Wales
crept out, a gun swinging from each fist. Yet though he was laden with
the armaments of war, he seemed singularly lackluster. Indigo surveyed
him up and down and with that glance had completely measured and
docketed the man. “Wasn’t you the fella who wanted to fight, a minute
ago?”

“I’m protectin’ the hotel,” explained Wales taciturnly.

“It’s yore hotel, huh?”

“I got an equity in it,” was the morose rejoinder.

“You got an equity in a damsite hotter place, too,” jeered Indigo, and
forthwith ran from the hostelry. He had feared he was too late, but a
glance dispelled the notion. Down in front of the Geyser, men and
horses were jammed in a whirlpool of conflict. Jets of light traced
across the darkness; voices shrilled defiance and counter defiance.
And from sundry rending, smashing sounds, it was plain that the Geyser
was being competently wrecked. Half of the invading party was inside,
the other half standing guard along the street, while the outraged
citizenry of Jingle Bell sniped at them from all angles. Indigo added
his falsetto crow to the confusion and looked about him with the air
of a tactician. “Why stand in the street an’ get a lead irrigation?”
he wanted to know. “These boys must be green.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

He came against four Jingle Bell men huddled in a patch of shadows,
firing alternately. “Foller me,” said Indigo. “We’ll blast ’em. Come
on.” He ducked along the street until he reached a rickety four-by-four
pillar supporting one end of a second-story porch. Up this he shinned,
with the Jingle Bell cohorts behind. “Now,” breathed Indigo, “fly at
it.”

The entrance to the Geyser was across the street and a few doors
westward. From the porch Indigo and his volunteers commanded a clear
sweep of the indistinct horsemen. Methodically they went to work. This
concentration of fire quite immediately disturbed the invaders; it
likewise warned them that Jingle Bell was organizing its resistance. A
yell called the wrecking party out of the saloon; they milled, throwing
lead in all directions, and galloped into darkness. A last shot echoed
from the open prairie and a last ribald yell ricocheted back. The men
of Jingle Bell ventured into the Geyser. Indigo dropped from the porch
and followed suit.

Indigo was not a hand much given to bothering about property values;
he had broken many a plate mirror himself and scarred many a mahogany
bar top. Nevertheless, the utter devastation wrought within the
saloon absolutely shocked him. And while the crowd took nourishment,
he stood gloomily aside and listened to the dictates of his
conscience. It wasn’t his fight, it wasn’t his saloon--and it wasn’t
his town. Still---- At that point Indigo’s guardian angel turned a
fresh page and reached for the red ink. He heard someone calling.
Already his dash for the second-story porch had been heralded and the
townsmen were regarding him as if he had established himself as a
definite personage. He moved up, drank, and continued to brood as the
talk eddied over his head. There was a scuffle at the saloon door; in
came a brace of men bearing a fellow somewhat wounded, yet still
fighting back. The invading party had left at least one hostage.

“Throw him in the cooler,” said Indigo. Meanwhile, he had something else
on his mind. “Where was those gents from, anyhow?”

“Oh, it’s the Big Elk bunch again. It’s allus the Big Elk bunch.”

“Well, I’ll be singed,” grunted Indigo. “How long’s this been goin’ on?”

“Blamed if I know. It was a habit when I come here ten years ago.”

“Think of that! An’ when was the last time you returned the visit?”

The crowd had closed around him. Someone else took up the story. “Well,
Indigo, Big Elk’s sorter outgrown us. Las’ time we sashayed over there
was two years back, an’ we like to got all killed. They’re twice our
number.”

“Think of that!”

                   *       *       *       *       *

At this point there was a diversion. Through the door galloped Gabe
Wales, bellowing like a bull. The guns still dangled in his fists, his
gimlet eyes were aflame with mighty wrath. “Come on, boys, le’s go get
’im! Le’s wipe Big Elk offen the map!”

The proper response was lacking. The assembled force of Jingle Bell
looked toward Indigo. Indigo twitched his nose at sight of Wales and
spoke soothingly. “If here ain’t little Albert again.”

Wales turned on him furiously. “I’ll bet you know somethin’ about that
bunch!”

“Listen, Albert, you got an awful habit of comin’ into the picture a
little late. You was pickin’ yore teeth last I saw, and not very anxious
to find trouble, either.”

“A dam’ spy!”

“Hush,” said Indigo. And, unaccountably, Gabe Wales hushed. Indigo’s
eyes were a bright green and wrinkles splayed across his face. Thus
for a moment he surveyed the gentleman, then swung and ignored him.
He addressed the crowd. “One thing’s certain. They’ll be back after
the partner they left behind.”

“Then,” spoke up a bystander, “let’s get busy to meet ’em.”

“They won’t come tonight,” said Indigo. And the deliberateness of each
word gave him immeasurable authority. “They’ve had ample for one night.
Prob’ly they’ll come tomorra.”

“Then le’s be ready to watch ’em arrive.”

“There you go again,” grunted Indigo. “The habit o’ receivin’ trouble
has sorter grown on you. Look what they did! Why, it bruises a man’s
instincks. It shore does. It makes me so mad I could fry aigs on my
bald spot! If they’s got to be a lot of furniture busted, why not
mosey over an’ bust some o’ their furniture for a change?”

Silence. Indigo shook his head. “Yore thinkin’ they’re too many.
Shucks. I stood off that daggone town by myself once. Don’t tell me
you can’t pulverize Big Elk.” He waited for this to penetrate, seeing
here and there a glimmer of heat. Of a sudden he struck the bar with
his fist. “Tomorra I’d like fifteen men to ride out a ways with me.
We’ll set a deadline. When they try to cross it we’ll give ’em an
education in manners. I’m drinkin’ with those fifteen. Who are the
said gents?”

A yell went to the roof. Collectively, Jingle Bell moved toward the
mahogany. Indigo nodded, noting from the corner of his eye that Gabe
Wales alone stood back. He beckoned the man. “You--come here. Yore
goin’. Oh, yes you are!”

                   *       *       *       *       *

Beyond noon of the following day, Jingle Bell men rode across the
prairie; the distance to Big Elk was approximately twelve miles, the
riding a piece of hot and sultry business. For part of the way it was a
rolling land, then it fell into a series of pot holes and broken arroyos
scattered with ancient rubble. To left and right were miniature bluffs!
Indigo’s attention was immediately drawn to them and he turned to a near
man. “Henry, you strike off there an’ see what’s to be seen.”

“It’s all dum foolishness,” grunted Gabe Wales. “They won’t be comin’.
And we can’t go into Big Elk by daylight.”

“Don’t worry none, Albert,” murmured Indigo. “I’ll satisfy yore cravin’
for lead candy.”

“My name,” snapped Gabe Wales, “ain’t Albert.”

“What an awful mistake yore mammy made.”

Henry, the flanker, was about five hundred yards removed when he wheeled
and came racing back. Indigo stood in his saddle, to find dust kicking
up along the western horizon; a compact body of horsemen advanced at the
trot. Indigo pointed to a small depression directly ahead that would
serve as a line of defense. “There’s our deadline. Now we’ll give these
boys lessons in geography.”

The men of Jingle Bell raced for shelter, dropped to the ground and,
at Indigo’s order, spread out. Big Elk’s partisans came forward at
redoubled speed and Indigo’s green eyes flickered with a rare joy.
“Now, take it easy. Aim low--we ain’t awful mad. Not yet. Let ’em see
the dust kickin’ up. That provokes mature reflection.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

A burst of shots shattered the sultry silence of the prairie. Streamers
of sand flicked across the earth, considerably short of the charging
party. It didn’t hurt anybody, but Indigo saw them flinch. He warned his
men a second time. “Keep it low. We don’t want blood, we want to educate
’em. Now--let ’em eat more gravel!”

The sputter of gunfire spread along the arroyo’s rim. This time the
sand sprayed beneath the traveling hoofs; and then the Big Elk party
swept down into a depression less than fifty yards removed. Dust
billowed high, as if from ponies stopping on their haunches. Nor did
Big Elk’s cavalry rise and come on. They had taken shelter. Stetsons
bobbed up and down.

Indigo nodded to his companions. “Petey an’ Ort, snuggle up to yore
rifles. Lay a little dirt down their necks.”

The two gentlemen designated went to work with pleasure and alacrity.
Indigo saw a riffle of dust rise beside an exposed Stetson; saw that
Stetson drop like a plummet. “Not too close, Ort. Just sorter close.”

Indigo, however, forgot that he was as plain as any bull’s eye target.
In a moment he toppled backward into the arroyo with his eyes full of
sand and a weird string of words in his mouth. The Big Elk contingent
had returned compliments. Gabe Wales grinned surreptitiously, at which
Indigo asked the man why he didn’t go live in Big Elk if he liked those
folks so well. Gabe muttered something that Indigo didn’t hear. For the
military chieftain of Jingle Bell saw a figure rise and drop away over
to the south of both lines. It looked as if a flanking move was in
progress. Crouching, Indigo raced along the arroyo, past his men, and a
good hundred yards farther. The arroyo made a gradual turn, approaching
nearer the depression in which the Big Elk party was stationed. Now and
then Indigo hooked his chin over the parapet, at intervals catching
sight of the Stetson still going south. Each time he ducked back and ran
parallel, until the sound of firing grew fainter and he lost sight of
his men. Coming to a shallow stretch, he discovered a convenient boulder
ten yards removed and made for it on his stomach. The Stetson bobbed up
again; Indigo put a shot over there and reached the rock’s substantial
shelter. A bullet promptly came back to him, as close as any bullet
could reach without turning corners. Indigo swore mellifluously. “The
gent means business. Oh well----”

He stuck out his hat, and immediately lost a piece of the brim. “I give
him credit for good shootin’,” was Indigo’s wrathful observation. “But
if he’s pickin’ on me----”

He was diverted by the sight of the Big Elk cavalcade spurring out of
their stronghold, in full retreat. A few shots burst across the still
air--then they were gone, with Indigo trying to count them and thus
reassure himself no trickery was in the air. “I guess they got the
lesson. Well, by golly!”

                   *       *       *       *       *

For no sooner had the representatives of Big Elk abandoned the scene,
than the Jingle Bell party followed suit, riding with equal rapidity in
the opposite direction. It looked to Indigo almost as if his companions
had developed a chill. Such haste was unseemly, and he expressed himself
to that effect. “Now it’s a private argument. That gent is a persistent
cuss. Why don’t he go home?” Almost immediately Indigo conceived the
idea of taking a roundabout pasear and catching his man by surprise. He
retreated from the rock, crawled along the depression and traveled some
fifty yards before sighting a cluster of rocks ahead. With commendable
alacrity he made for this shelter. But when not quite ten yards away,
the hungry aperture of a gun barrel popped into his face, grasped by a
set of lean fingers. A Stetson rose up, and Joe Breedlove’s familiar
features confronted him. “Well--uh----” wheezed Indigo.

Joe’s face was coated with dust, it was Joe’s fighting face, grim and
flinty. But that expression remained but a moment. A light sparkled
deep in the blue eyes and of a sudden Indigo felt extremely guilty.
Joe always made him feel guilty in a situation like this.

“Picture of a man keepin’ out of trouble,” murmured Joe gravely.

Indigo defended himself hotly. “Don’t look like yore doin’ needlework,
either. Did you happen to ventilate my sky piece?”

“I guess so. It must’ve been yore artillery that breezed me, likewise.”

“Good gosh!” said Indigo, a trifle shaky. “Le’s smoke.”

They manufactured their cigarettes in complete silence. Joe was
matchlessly serene; presently he began to smile. “Old Home week. I’ll
bet you organized this picnic, Indigo.”

“Say, that was a fine ruckus you boys staged las’ night in Jingle Bell!”

“Me?” countered Joe. “I wasn’t there. I come over today with the bunch
to see if I couldn’t help rescue the lad lef’ behind. Also to spread a
little peace talk.”

“Jingle Bell,” maintained Indigo with dignity, “has suffered long
enough. Why, that nice little town has been a vale o’ tears goin’ on
twenty years now. All because o’ Big Elk--” He bogged down there and
had to lean on Joe for data. “Say, what caused this scrappin’ in the
first place?”

“Don’t you know what yore fightin’ for?” demanded Joe.

“Oh,” said Indigo, waving an arm vaguely, “it looked ’sif they needed
help.”

“Listen,” drawled Joe, grinding his cigarette into the earth. “Thirty
years ago, Big Elk took the county seat away from Jingle Bell----”

“A blamed outrage!” broke in Indigo.

“--and the towns have been scrappin’ ever since. But lately it’d have
died down if certain parties hadn’t sorter fed the flames to keep it
goin’. Savee? Well, the sheriff is naturally a Big Elk gent. His life
wouldn’t be worth a plugged dime in Jingle Bell. So every time any
son-of-a-gun wants to escape the wrath o’ justice he hides out in
Jingle Bell. These certain parties know that. They need this kind o’
protection.”

“What parties--what for?”

“Rustlin’,” murmured Joe. “They’s two jaspers at the top o’ the heap.
One is a fella by name o’ Sweeny, from Big Elk. The other holes up at
Jingle Bell. Monicker’s Gabe Wales.”

“That hop-toad!” snorted Indigo. “Allus shootin’ off his face about Big
Elk.”

“Shore. Pays him to.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

Now Indigo was a forthright soul. Having once discovered an error in
the universe, he was all for righting it. So naturally enough his first
suggestion was for action. “Why not get these gents?”

“It would’ve been difficult--up to this mornin’,” answered Joe. “Only
a few folks knew about it. I got good friends, which is how I knew.
But this mornin’ Mister Sweeny made the mistake o’ venturin’ into
Trent county an’ the sheriff nails him on an old charge. Before Sweeny
dies he makes a complete statement of what it’s all about. Namin’ Gabe
Wales. Of course, Jingle Bell wouldn’t believe the yarn if a Big Elk
sheriff happened to tell it--so the Trent county sheriff is moseyin’
over to Jingle Bell to explain. Prob’ly there now.”

“So that caused all this ruckus,” murmured Indigo. “Well, it’s over now.
I ain’t sorry. I’m sorter fatigued with fightin’.”

But Joe Breedlove was not finished. Whereas Indigo always wanted to
wind up a matter as abruptly as possible, Joe loved to hemstitch a
few artistic posies into human relations. Said he, “Yeah, it’s over.
Now we’ll get both towns together at some place, have a banquet and
formally bury the hatchet.”

Indigo looked coldly at his partner. “It won’t do. Nossir, it won’t do.”

“Why not?”

“I dunno why not,” said Indigo, not given to analysis. “But it won’t
do.”

Joe, however, was set on his point. “It’ll be an experiment in the
mutability o’ human nature.”

“I don’t reco’nize the word,” grumbled Indigo, “but it shore sounds
harsh.”

Joe got up. “Of course, if you ain’t with me on the idea----”

“Who said I wasn’t with you?” barked Indigo--testily. “I only said it
was an awful idee. If yore so daggone bound up in it, all right, I’m
in. But you bet I’ll be ready to duck.”

They parted, each going to his horse and riding off. On the solitary
trip to Jingle Bell, Indigo shook his head more than once. “Sometimes
it seems to me Joe gets unnecessarily sentimental. It’ll be an awful
bust.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

It was sunset when Indigo reached town. And before he could get off his
horse, Petey and Ort came up to explain their retreat. “We figgered
mebbe them Big Elk boys was tryin’ to run a whizzer on us. So we dusted
for town. Didn’t know what had happened to you, anyhow. Say, heard the
news? Gabe Wales is in jail, complicated with rustlin’.”

“Sad--very sad,” said Indigo, though he seemed to bear up well under the
news.

“Sad?” snorted Petey. “Huh! You know what he an’ Sweeny of Big Elk was
a-doin’? A-fomentin’ trouble between the two towns, so’s their crew o’
rustlers could have a safe harbor in time o’ trouble! Ain’t that sweet,
now?”

Indigo nodded and went to the restaurant. After that he repaired to the
saloon where a royal greeting awaited him. He took the acclaim with due
modesty--tinged somewhat with gloom. For he heard the sacred precincts
of the Geyser echo with sentiments hitherto alien. Men were discussing
the town that for thirty odd years had been poison and plague to them;
and they were admitting, with a magnanimous show of impartiality, that
perhaps Jingle Bell had harbored unjust suspicions. The feeling seemed
to be that although Big Elk had practically stolen the county seat and
would likewise steal anything else that wasn’t riveted to the landscape,
yet there might be a few decent people over thereabouts. Anyhow, this
fighting business had gone on too long; it was time to quit--to live and
let live. Thus the spirit of fraternal concord rose from the ashes and
became a pale and fluttering ray, which in time and with careful nursing
might actually generate heat and energy. Indigo shook his head. It
looked as if a banquet was inevitable.

“It’ll be awful!” said he, to himself.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Big Elk’s formal invitation to the banquet reached Jingle Bell the
next day, borne by Joe Breedlove and three others. An equal number of
Jingle Bell dignitaries was hastily got together and the two parties
convened at the Geyser where a judicious amount of liquid was imbibed
to remove vocal impediments. Observations were made as to the weather
and the state of the beef stock; after that Joe Breedlove,
unmistakably the guiding spirit of his delegation, rehearsed a little
past history and proposed the banquet. The Jingle Bell committee
returned adequate compliments, promised to consider the matter and
referred to that remark made by the governor of North Carolina to the
governor of South Carolina. Immediately upon the departure of the Big
Elk delegation a convention of the citizens was summoned.

There were certain benighted gentlemen who saw no good in the
proposition, but the forces of progress gradually won. After all, it
wouldn’t be seemly for Jingle Bell to back down from any proposition
Big Elk made and the meeting got down to particulars. Obviously, the
affair couldn’t be held in either town--that would give one party too
great a bulge on the other. It was also suggested that the number of
each side should be the same, to wit, fifteen. Phil Layton, a veteran
of the country, set this number; and it is to be believed that he did
so after calculating the number of good shots available.

That was the sense of the convention. In due time it was conveyed to
Big Elk with congratulations, best regards, and all good wishes. Big
Elk thereupon called another convention and discussed Jingle Bell’s
amendments at ample length. Every comma, period and ink spot was
scrutinized for possible double-meaning and guile. But no colored man
was found in the woodpile. Presently it was decided that the Three
Pines ranch-house would make a suitable point at which to hold the
banquet, being situated midway between towns. It was further decided
that if Jingle Bell was so suspicious as to limit the number, then
fifteen tried and true stalwarts only should plant their boots under
the table on each side. And this was transmitted back to Jingle Bell
with felicitations, the greeting of the season, and happy sentiments.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Immediately Jingle Bell, in convention assembled, tore the latest
proposals quite apart, suspected trickery but could not find it, and
reluctantly assented; adding the further proviso that all guns should
be checked outside the door and that there should be one extra man
from each town to guard these weapons. Nor were there to be any other
kind of death-dealing instruments to be carried inside the house.
Pocket knives, it was agreed after considerable debate, would not be
considered as weapons. At this point Indigo left the Geyser and
studied the stars. “Civic harmony? It sounds like trouble hell-bent
around the corner to me. Somebody’s goin’ to get shot yet.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

After that a kind of grim silence settled over the county for thirty-six
hours. On each side, fifteen men and a gun guard were chosen. Certain
other arrangements, not exactly in the compact and somewhat shrouded by
obscurity, were made. And at exactly seven o’clock, as twilight fell,
the two parties met, dismounted together, gave up their guns together
and passed inside the Three Pines ranch-house. Stoic gravity marbled
each swart face; and the feast of amity began in silence, with potato
soup. Indigo had chosen the seat nearest the door; but observing Joe
Breedlove watching him from the remote end of the room, he sighed gently
and moved on down until he was across from his partner. There was a
hitch right at the beginning. It was discovered that an extra plate had
been laid, on each side of the table. The assembled gentry of Jingle
Bell looked gravely at the assembled Big Elk partisans. Joe Breedlove
rose up and said, “I reckon they misjudged the number we wanted. Let it
slide. No harm done.”

But a Big Elk man murmured, “Jes’ a minute,” and went outside. A
soft whistle cleft the darkness; the gentleman presently returned
with a recruit who took the empty plate on Big Elk’s side. At this
Joe Breedlove frowned upon his own townsmen, but nobody returned his
glance. A Jingle Bell cohort vanished into the shadows with equal
promptitude and had the same measure of success in finding another
man. A certain reserve contaminated the atmosphere, a certain
regrettable chill came at each wary eye. Indigo drank his soup
dourly. It may have been that there was an ironic flicker in his
green orbs when he looked to his partner; it may have been that Joe
Breedlove dropped a lid in reply. At any rate the tall partner rose,
his silver hair gleaming in the lamplight and a mellow smile on his
bronzed and handsome face. The very sight of him there was enough to
thaw the atmosphere; it was a rare time when Joe could not bend men
with the charm of his genial assurance, the quizzical humor of his
eyes. He looked from man to man and waved his arm across their heads
as if in benediction.

“Boys,” said he, drawling each syllable, “it does me good to see
this. They was some carping critics that maintained no good would
ever come of it. They was some gents that misdoubted these two nice,
upstandin’ little cities could ever meet in polite palaver. Those
fellows had the beam in their eyes.” He looked cheerfully at Indigo
and appeared not to see the leer of doubt upon his partner’s wizened
features. “Yeah, the beam in their eyes. Now me, I’m a son of Big
Elk. But I set a great store by the prosperity o’ the county. It has
shorely grieved me two such fine cities couldn’t abide in peace an’
put the civic shoulders to the wheel o’ the progress. After all, it
was the work of gents who wanted trouble for their own ends. It’s
settled now. We want to bury the bone o’ contention so deep that old
Nick’s own dog Nero won’t ever scratch it up. Now, I see a man over
on the Jingle Bell side that I used to punch cows for. A square,
upright gent who has always got a sensible word danglin’ on his
tongue. Rise up, Phil Layton, an’ pour a little oil.”

                   *       *       *       *       *

The designated personage looked as if somebody had caught him in the
act of stealing sheep. He said something like, “I’ll be gug-gug----”
in a strangled voice. But the eyes of the multitude were upon him and
so he stood up, a slab-sided fellow with a hatchet jaw and no amount
of fraternal cheer on his leather jowls. He opened his mouth, closed
it, picked a knife from the table and ran it across his coat sleeve.
“Well, I dunno,” said he. “Mebbe we-all have been sorter careless.
Not that I’m apologizin’ for Jingle Bell y’unnerstan’; ner condemnin’
Big Elk. Anybody’s apt to shoot off a few poisonous remarks. It’s
possible both sides was rash. Seems to me the side which is biggest
was the most rash--which might be natural. Of course all this how-do
started thirty-one years ago, come July, when the county seat was
boldly stole----”

At this point a remark seeped out of some gentleman on the Big Elk
side. It had no precise meaning, but its intent was distinctly ribald,
distinctly challenging. It sounded like “Rats,” though, of course,
there were no rats in that room. A noticeable livening of interest
passed along the festive board. Every man but one stopped eating, the
exception being Indigo, who was doggedly determined to fill up before
trouble started. Joe Breedlove hastily interposed. “You was sayin’,
wasn’t you, Phil, that it was time we sh’d quit fightin’?”

Phil Layton grimly faced the serene Joe. “Yeh,” he grunted. “Them was my
words--if I said ’em.”

This might have saved the evening and the general meeting of minds might
have gone on undisturbed had not another skeptic on the Big Elk side
muttered, “Huh!” in a very suspicious manner. Phil Layton swung angrily.
“What was yuh gruntin’ about, yuh moon faced sheepeater?”

The Big Elk partisan was not reluctant about entering the parley. “I
was wonderin’ how many extra men Jingle Bell has got hid over by the
poplars.”

“Oh, is that bitin’ yuh?” snapped Layton. “Well, prob’ly we ain’t got
half so many as you boys have cached out behind the barns.”

“Who said we had any fellows hidin’ behind the corrals?” countered
the Big Elk gentleman. “It’s a dam’ lie. And even if it ain’t a lie,
we knowed blamed well you fellas would try a stunt like that.”

“Like I was sayin’--” interposed Joe Breedlove; but the tide rushed
in and bore him out of the scene. Indigo tilted his head toward the
ceiling, appearing to see nothing, hear nothing. Yet he saw and heard
everything; and his relaxed attitude was only a mask. He was ready to
jump.

                   *       *       *       *       *

Phil Layton hammered the table, his words smacked the air resoundingly.
“If they’s any rannies pulled around here it’ll be on the Big Elk side.
Yuh couldn’t no more help bein’ crooked than a snake could help crawl.
Yuh stole the county seat--yuh’d steal offen yore own grand folks,
providin’ yuh had any, which I doubt. I don’t want to git personal none,
but I will observe somethin’ in this room smells an’ it comes from yore
side o’ the table!”

Forthwith a Big Elk stalwart rose to his feet. “The atmosphere is some
tainted all right. But the breeze is blowin’ from yore direction. Jingle
Bell has been dead thirty years--an’ it ain’t been buried yet.”

Chairs flew back; up rose the assembled gentlemen. Indigo sighed and
shrugged his thin shoulders. “Jes’ a minute,” pleaded Joe. “They’s a
mistake----”

“You bet they’s a mistake!” bellowed Phil Layton. “The mistake is tryin’
to get sixteen mutton lovers to eat beef! I ain’t a proud man, but my
ears shore do burn to think what a disgraceful night this is for me.”

“Nothin’ ever comes from Jingle Bell but dust,” jeered another Big Elk
partisan. “Dust an’ hot air!”

“Yeh? Well, they’s plenty o’ Big Elk boys that’s proud o’ Jingle Bell
when yore tinhorn sheriff gets busy.”

“Aw, go home to yore cemetery!”

“Cemetery? I’m sayin’ Big Elk’s cemetery will do some business before
this meetin’s adjourned!”

“Yeh?”

“Yeah!”

“Yuh lie!”

“Who lies--yuh liar!”

                   *       *       *       *       *

Up rose the long table, borne by thirty-odd pairs of contesting arms;
up and over with a rending and a crashing of dishes. Down went the
lamps. The spilling kerosene flamed a bright blue, reared and whipped
out. In the darkness words were flailing back and forth across the
table and then a moment of deceptive silence descended, in which
Indigo could be heard muttering, “Awful. Somebody’s goin’ to get hurt
yet. I wish I’d held on to that dish o’ hominy.”

He said something else, but it was lost in the roar of a gun. That shot
was a signal. Instantly the place was aquiver with the blasting report
of guns as sundry unarmed men discovered weapons from queer sources. A
torrent of poisonous epithets, rocketing yells--and the Three Pines
ranch-house shivered with the shock of bodies hurling toward the exit.
Window panes jingled and the firing dropped off. Some thirty men had
arrived at the doorway about the same time; and the grunting and the
heaving--with all its by-products--was something fearful to hear. It
seemed as if the whole wall was about to burst asunder. From the
outside came the crackling of other guns in other hands, appearing to
rise out of two distinct places, the corrals and the poplars. And it
continued until the contending factions had fought out of the door.
Hoofs drummed around and around the house, there were other bludgeoning
words and a further spattering of bullets as the two parties withdrew
and raced in opposite directions. Silence reigned in the house.

But not for long. After a decent interval someone swore placidly. A
match flared, revealing Indigo’s gloomy countenance down behind a pile
of chairs. And from an opposite corner rose the familiar drawl of Joe
Breedlove. “Well, Indigo.”

“Well, Joe.”

One of the Three Pines women ventured in, bearing a lamp. The yellow
rays gleamed on utter ruin. More than that, they gleamed on a pocket
pistol in Indigo’s fist. Joe challenged him then and there. “Didn’t
you know this was to be an affair o’ peace, Indigo?”

“Uhuh,” said Indigo, a little sheepishly. “But, you see, I wouldn’t of
had it, if it’d been a peaceful affair.”

This reasoning seemed to be both devious and open to certain errors of
logic. But Joe let it pass. “Let’s smoke,” said he.

“I wish I’d kept aholt of that bowl o’ hominy,” grieved Indigo.

“You got any further business in Jingle Bell, Indigo?”

“No, sir. I’m a singed cat an’ I got to grow my whiskers before I go
smellin’ any more trouble.”

“That’s my identic idee,” said Joe, casually. “I think you’n me had
better get our hosses an’ sift.”

“Where to, Joe?”

“South.”

“It sounds reasonable,” muttered Indigo. They rose and went outside.
Starlight had come and the bosom of the prairie was filled with peace.
“Human nature,” said Joe Breedlove, sadly, “is plumb immutable.”

“I could say it in shorter words,” replied Indigo, “but they couldn’t
sound no worse. Le’s ride.”


[Transcriber’s note: This story appeared in the May 10, 1928 issue
of _Short Stories_ magazine.]
