The sheriff was the first to break it. He thrust his brown hands deep into his pockets and laughed—laughed with the joyous, rollicking abandon of a tickled schoolboy.
“Hysterics?” ventured the mining engineer sympathetically.
Collins wiped his eyes. “Call ’em anything you like. What pleases me is that the reverend gentleman should have had this diverting experience so prompt after he was wishing for it.” He turned, with concern, to the clergyman. “Satisfied, sir? Did our little entertainment please, or wasn’t it up to the mark?”
But the transported native of Pekin was game. “I’m quite satisfied, if you are. I think the affair cost you a hundred dollars or so more than it did me.”
“That’s right,” agreed the sheriff heartily. “But I don’t grudge it—not a cent of it. The show was worth the price of admission.”
The car conductor had a broadside ready for him. “Seems to me you shot off your mouth more than you did that big gun of yours, Mr. Sheriff.”
Collins laughed, and clapped him on the back. “That’s right. I’m a regular phonograph, when you wind me up.” He did not think it necessary to explain that he had talked to make the outlaws talk, and that he had noted the quality of their voices so carefully that he would know them again among a thousand. Also he had observed—other things—the garb of each of the men he had seen, their weapons, their manner, and their individual peculiarities.
The clanking car took up the rhythm of the rails as the delayed train plunged forward once more into the night. Again the clack of tongues, set free from fear, buzzed eagerly. The glow of the afterclap of danger was on them, and in the warm excitement each forgot the paralyzing fear that had but now padlocked his lips. Courage came flowing back into flabby cheeks and red blood into hearts of water.
At the next station the Limited stopped, and the conductor swung from a car before the wheels had ceased rolling and went running into the telegraph office.
“Fire a message through for me, Pat. The Limited has been held up,” he announced.