“I imagined as much,” remarked Bud; “but I didn’t care to get them through that way once I had started the other. I hope, Mr. Bissell, that we can be friends, although we have been enemies up to now. I’m sorry I had to sacrifice those cattle of the association, but there was no other way out of it.”
“I’ll tell yuh this, Larkin,” returned Bissell. “Anybody that can beat me at anything is good enough to be my friend fer life, an’ I’m here to state that yuh could count my friends of that type, before you came, on the hairs of a hairless dog!”
Bud laughed, they shook hands again, and peace was finally made between them; but not until Beef Bissell had signed away half of the interest in the Bar T to Julie as her dower.
That was a happy and hilarious dinner at the ranch. Some of the cowboys coming in at noon from near-by ranges heard of the marriage and cheered the bride lustily when she appeared on the veranda. Bud made himself solid with the disgruntled punchers by walking out to them and talking over the battle of Welsh’s Butte, while he rolled cigarettes and smoked them one after another. 308
Shortly afterward, Bud and Lester found themselves in a room with Smithy Caldwell. The blackmailer, when he saw Lester, fell down in a faint, so great was the shock to his already wrecked nervous system. The man was really in a terrible condition both from physical fear and the tormenting by his comrades. He started at every slight sound, whirled about fearfully to meet any footfall that sounded near, and trembled with uncontrollable nervous spasms.
To both the Larkins he was a piteous sight, and Bud wondered that the miserable creature had not gone mad.
The wretch fell on his knees and pleaded with them for his life, so that when Bud put the proposition squarely up to him that he forswear everything in regard to the Larkin family, he could not accept it eagerly enough.
“But about the papers that you said were in Chicago?” asked Bud.
“I lied about them,” replied Smithy. “They’re sewed in the lining of my shirt. Give me your knife and I’ll get ’em for you.”
“Give me your shirt and I’ll find them,” countered Bud; and he presently did.