So through the good-will of Curly Bill young Breckenbridge recovered the thoroughbred from the man who had stolen it and brought it to Tombstone without being obliged to reach for his own gun. And moreover there were no hard feelings about it when he rode back into no-man’s-land the next time. So far as Frank McLowery and the Clanton boys were concerned the incident was closed. The deputy had won out and that was all there was to it.
As a matter of fact only a month or so later a horse-thief from Lincoln County, New Mexico, came to grief at Galeyville because he did not understand Breckenbridge’s status in the rustlers’ metropolis. This bad man from the Pecos had a pretty sorrel pony and the deputy, who was in the place on civil business, happened to notice the animal at the hitching-rack in front of the hotel.
“Say,” he said to its possessor, who was standing near by, “that’s a nice horse; where’d you get him?”
The remark was a careless one in a country where ponies often changed owners overnight, and the man from the Pecos was sensitive enough on the subject to resent the question from one who wore a star. He answered it by drawing his gun.
Breckenbridge, who was as dexterous with his left hand as with his right, reached down as the weapon came forth from its holster and gripped the stranger’s wrist. He gave a sharp wrench and the revolver clattered down on the sidewalk. And then Curly Bill, 129 who had witnessed the incident, stepped forward and ordered the visitor out of Galeyville.
“Yo’-all don’t need to think,” the desperado added, “that you can come here and make a gun-play on our deputy. We get along all right with him and I reckon we ain’t going to stand for any cow-thieves from Lincoln County gettin’ brash with him.”
Something like two years had passed now since young Billy Breckenbridge first rode across the Dragoon Mountains into no-man’s-land and, as the old-timers who had been watching him all this time well knew, things could not go on in this way forever. The show-down was bound to come. It came one day at the Chandler ranch and the old-timers got the answer to their question.
There were two young fellows by the name of Zwing Hunt and Billy Grounds who had been working at Philip Morse’s sawmill over in the Chiracahua Mountains.
Somehow or other they had got mixed up with the stock-rustlers and the temptation to make easy money proved too strong for them. One evening they went over to the Contention mill and held up the place, killing the man in charge.
Johnny Behan was out of town at the time with several deputies after the Earps who had departed from Tombstone. The under-sheriff detailed Breckenbridge on the case and drafted a posse of three men to help him.