"If this man has lost a horse by thieves, I'm willing to lead a posse to hunt them."
"Good man! I'll go with you! That's the stuff! You're all right!" came from many throats, and leaving the still unconscious storekeeper where he lay, the crowd trooped off, the bandits at their head, to secure their mounts.
Unwilling to use their thoroughbreds in the condition in which they were after the harsh treatment to which they had been subjected, the three desperadoes asked for other horses and the very men who had been most eager to hang them were the most importunate in urging them to accept some of theirs.
"You won't accuse us of stealing 'em if we ride 'em, will you?" grinned Frank.
The thrust took with the crowd, putting them in rare good humour and, laughing and chatting, they rode forth to hunt the thieves.
By tacit agreement, the leadership of the posse was yielded to the world-famous desperado.
"Which way do we take to get to Consollas' farms?" he asked as they gained the highway.
"To the right," came the answer while others protested that it would be only a waste of time to go there.
But Jesse insisted that he wished to question the farm hands to get a description of the thieves and to learn the time when the mare had been missed and where she was when last seen and the others withdrew their objections.
Setting a smart pace, the bandit-chieftain, his pals on each side, and the posse were "burning up" the road when they beheld a cloud of dust ahead of them from which, as it drew nearer, emerged a horseman.