The man laughed without cordiality. “Seeing as I have owned it three years I allow I have some right.”
“What's the use of talking? He's the man we want, broke in another impatiently.
“Who is the man you want?” asked their prisoner.
“You're the man we want, Jim Kinney.”
“Wrong guess. My name is Larry Neill. I'm from the Panhandle and I've never been in this part of the country till two days ago.”
“You may have a dozen names. We don't care what you call yourself. Of course you would deny being the man we're after. But that don't go with us.”
“All right. Take me back to Fort Lincoln, or take me to the prison officials. They will tell you whether I am the man.”
The leader of the party pounced on his slip. “Who mentioned prison? Who told you we wanted an escaped prisoner?”
“He's give himself away,” triumphed the one edged Tom. “I guess that clinches it. He's riding Maloney's hawss. He's wounded; so's the man we want. He answers the description—gray eyes, tall, slim, muscular. Same gun—automatic Colt. Tell you there's nothin' to it, Duffield.”
“If you're not Kinney, how come you with this hawss? He stole it from a barn in Fort Lincoln last night. That's known,” said the leader, Duffield.