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Chapter XV. Seven For One
 Dangerous men were no novelty for Gregg. He had lived with them, worked with them, as hard-fisted himself as any, and as ready for trouble, but the man of the mountain-desert has a for the practiced, known gun-fighter. In the days of the rapier when the art of fence grew so complicated that half a life was needed for its mastery, men would as soon commit suicide as it with an assured ; and the man of the mountain-desert has a similar respect for those who are born, it might be said, gun in hand. There was ample reason for the prickling in his scalp, Vic felt, for here he sat on an errand of danger with three of these deadly fighters. Two of them he knew by name and repute, however dimly, and as for Daniels, unless all signs failed the dark, sharp-eyed fellow was hardly less grim than the others. Vic the three one by one. Daniels might be for an outburst of wild temper and in that moment he could be as terrible as any. Lee Haines would fight coolly, his blue eyes never clouded by passion, for that was his repute as the right hand man of Jim Silent, in the days when Jim had been a terrible, half-legendary figure. One felt that same quiet strength as the haired man talked to Barry now; his voice was a smooth, deep current. But as for Barry himself, Gregg could not the factors which entered into the man. By all outward seeming that slender, half-timid figure was not a of the force which either of the others represented, but out of the past Gregg's memory gathered more and more details, clear and clearer, of the wolf-dog, the black stallion, and the whistling man who tracked down Silent—“Whistling Dan” Barry; that was what they called him, sometimes. Nothing was definite in the mind of Gregg. The stories consisted of patched details, heard here and there at third or fourth hand, but he remembered one incident in which Barry had ridden, so told, into the very heart of Elkhead, taken from the jail this very man, this Lee Haines, and carried him through the of every armed man in Elkhead. And there was another picture, dimmer still, which an eye witness had painted: of how, at an appointed hour, Barry met Jim Silent and killed him.  
Out of these thoughts he glanced again at the man in the shadow, half expecting to find his host to giant size. Instead, he found the same form, the same old suggestion of youth which would not age, the same pale hands, of almost feminine . Lee Haines talked on—about a porphyry somewhere to the north—a to be found in the space of ten thousand square miles—a list of vague clues—an appeal for Barry to help them find it—and Barry was held listening though ever seeming to drift, or about to drift, towards the door. Black Bart lay facing his master, and his snaky head followed every movement. Kate sat where the firelight barely touched on her, and in her arms she held Joan, whose face and great bright eyes were turned towards Daddy Dan. All things in the room centered on the place where the man sat by the wall, and the sense of something swept over Gregg; then a wild fear—did they know the danger outside? He must make conversation; he turned to Kate, but at the same moment the voice of Buck Daniels beside him, close.
 
“I know how you feel, old man. I remember an old bay hoss of mine, a Morgan hoss, and when he died I grieved for near onto a year, mostly. He wasn't much of a hoss to look at, too long coupled, you'd say, and his legs was short, but he got about like a coyote and when he sat down on a rope you couldn't him with a team of Percherons. That's how good he was! When he was a four year old I was cutting out yearlin's with him, and how—”
 
The loud, cheerful tone fell away to a , Daniels leaned closer, with a smile of humor, but the words which came to Gregg were: “Partner, if I was you I'd get up and git and I wouldn't stop till I put a hell of a long ways between me and this cabin!”
 
It well of Vic's nerve that no start betrayed him. He bowed his head a little, as though to catch the trend of the jolly story better, nodding.
 
“What's wrong?” he muttered back.
 
“Barry's watchin' you out of the shadow.”
 
Then: “You fool, don't l............
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