The Octopus - Frank Norris (novel24 .TXT) š
- Author: Frank Norris
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After the first scramble for safety, the crowd fell quiet for the fraction of an instant, glued to the walls, afraid to stir, struck dumb and motionless with surprise and terror, and in the instantās silence that followed Annixter, his eyes on Delaney, muttered rapidly to Hilma:
āGet back, get away to one side. The fool MIGHT shoot.ā
There was a secondās respite afforded while Delaney occupied himself in quieting the buckskin, and in that second of time, at this moment of crisis, the wonderful thing occurred. Hilma, turning from Delaney, her hands clasped on Annixterās arm, her eyes meeting his, exclaimed:
āYou, too!ā
And that was all; but to Annixter it was a revelation. Never more alive to his surroundings, never more observant, he suddenly understood. For the briefest lapse of time he and Hilma looked deep into each otherās eyes, and from that moment on, Annixter knew that Hilma cared.
The whole matter was brief as the snapping of a finger. Two words and a glance and all was done. But as though nothing had occurred, Annixter pushed Hilma from him, repeating harshly:
āGet back, I tell you. Donāt you see heās got a gun? Havenāt I enough on my hands without you?ā
He loosed her clasp and his eyes once more on Delaney, moved diagonally backwards toward the side of the barn, pushing Hilma from him. In the end he thrust her away so sharply that she gave back with a long stagger; somebody caught her arm and drew her in, leaving Annixter alone once more in the middle of the floor, his hands in his coat pockets, watchful, alert, facing his enemy.
But the cow-puncher was not ready to come to grapples yet. Fearless, his wits gambolling under the lash of the alcohol, he wished to make the most of the occasion, maintaining the suspense, playing for the gallery. By touches of the hand and knee he kept the buckskin in continual, nervous movement, her hoofs clattering, snorting, tossing her head, while he, himself, addressing himself to Annixter, poured out a torrent of invective.
āWell, strike me blind if it aināt old Buck Annixter! He was going to show me off Quien Sabe at the toe of his boot, was he? Well, hereās your chance,āwith the ladies to see you do it. Gives a dance, does he, high-falutinā hoe-down in his barn and forgets to invite his old broncho-bustinā friend. But his friend donāt forget him; no, he donāt. He remembers little things, does his broncho-bustinā friend. Likes to see a dance hisself on occasion, his friend does. Comes anyhow, trustinā his welcome will be hearty; just to see old Buck Annixter dance, just to show Buck Annixterās friends how Buck can danceādance all by hisself, a little hen-on-a-hot-plate dance when his broncho-bustinā friend asks him so polite. A little dance for the ladies, Buck. This feature of the entertainment is alone worth the price of admission. Tune up, Buck. Attention now! Iāll give you the key.ā
He āfannedā his revolver, spinning it about his index finger by the trigger-guard with incredible swiftness, the twirling weapon a mere blur of blue steel in his hand. Suddenly and without any apparent cessation of the movement, he fired, and a little splinter of wood flipped into the air at Annixterās feet.
āTime!ā he shouted, while the buckskin reared to the report. āHold onāwait a minute. This place is too light to suit. That big light yonder is in my eyes. Look out, Iām going to throw lead.ā
A second shot put out the lamp over the musiciansā stand. The assembled guests shrieked, a frantic, shrinking quiver ran through the crowd like the huddling of frightened rabbits in their pen.
Annixter hardly moved. He stood some thirty paces from the buster, his hands still in his coat pockets, his eyes glistening, watchful. Excitable and turbulent in trifling matters, when actual bodily danger threatened he was of an abnormal quiet.
āIām watching you,ā cried the other. āDonāt make any mistake about that. Keep your hands in your COAT pockets, if youād like to live a little longer, understand? And donāt let me see you make a move toward your hip or your friends will be asked to identify you at the morgue to-morrow morning. When Iām bad, Iām called the Undertakerās Friend, so I am, and Iām that bad tonight that Iām scared of myself. Theyāll have to revise the census returns before Iām done with this place. Come on, now, Iām getting tired waiting. I come to see a dance.ā
āHand over that horse, Delaney,ā said Annixter, without raising his voice, āand clear out.ā
The other affected to be overwhelmed with infinite astonishment, his eyes staring. He peered down from the saddle.
āWh-a-a-t!ā he exclaimed; āwh-a-a-t did you say? Why, I guess you must be looking for trouble; thatās what I guess.ā
āThereās where youāre wrong, māson,ā muttered Annixter, partly to Delaney, partly to himself. āIf I was looking for trouble there wouldnāt be any guess-work about it.ā
With the words he began firing. Delaney had hardly entered the barn before Annixterās plan had been formed. Long since his revolver was in the pocket of his coat, and he fired now through the coat itself, without withdrawing his hands.
Until that moment Annixter had not been sure of himself. There was no doubt that for the first few moments of the affair he would have welcomed with joy any reasonable excuse for getting out of the situation. But the sound of his own revolver gave him confidence. He whipped it from his pocket and fired again.
Abruptly the duel began, report following report, spurts of pale blue smoke jetting like the darts of short spears between the two men, expanding to a haze and drifting overhead in wavering strata. It was quite probable that no thought of killing each other suggested itself to either Annixter or Delaney. Both fired without aiming very deliberately. To empty their revolvers and avoid being hit was the desire common to both. They no longer vituperated each other. The revolvers spoke for them.
Long after, Annixter could recall this moment. For years he could with but little effort reconstruct the sceneāthe densely packed crowd flattened against the sides of the barn, the festoons of lanterns, the mingled smell of evergreens, new wood, sachets, and powder smoke; the vague clamour of distress and terror that rose from the throng of guests, the squealing of the buckskin, the uneven explosions of the revolvers, the reverberation of trampling hoofs, a brief glimpse of Harran Derrickās excited face at the door of the harness room, and in the open space in the centre of the floor, himself and Delaney, manoeuvring swiftly in a cloud of smoke.
Annixterās revolver contained but six cartridges. Already it seemed to him as if he had fired twenty times. Without doubt the next shot was his last. Then what? He peered through the blue haze that with every discharge thickened between him and the buster. For his own safety he must āplaceā at least one shot. Delaneyās chest and shoulders rose suddenly above the smoke close upon him as the distraught buckskin reared again. Annixter, for the first time during the fight, took definite aim, but before he could draw the trigger there was a great shout and he was aware of the buckskin, the bridle trailing, the saddle empty, plunging headlong across the floor, crashing into the line of chairs. Delaney was scrambling off the floor. There was blood on the busterās wrist and he no longer carried his revolver. Suddenly he turned and ran. The crowd parted right and left before him as he made toward the doorway. He disappeared.
Twenty men promptly sprang to the buckskinās head, but she broke away, and wild with terror, bewildered, blind, insensate, charged into the corner of the barn by the musiciansā stand. She brought up against the wall with cruel force and with impact of a sack of stones; her head was cut. She turned and charged again, bull-like, the blood streaming from her forehead. The crowd, shrieking, melted before her rush. An old man was thrown down and trampled. The buckskin trod upon the dragging bridle, somersaulted into a confusion of chairs in one corner, and came down with a terrific clatter in a wild disorder of kicking hoofs and splintered wood. But a crowd of men fell upon her, tugging at the bit, sitting on her head, shouting, gesticulating. For five minutes she struggled and fought; then, by degrees, she recovered herself, drawing great sobbing breaths at long intervals that all but burst the girths, rolling her eyes in bewildered, supplicating fashion, trembling in every muscle, and starting and shrinking now and then like a young girl in hysterics. At last she lay quiet. The men allowed her to struggle to her feet. The saddle was removed and she was led to one of the empty stalls, where she remained the rest of the evening, her head low, her pasterns quivering, turning her head apprehensively from time to time, showing the white of one eye and at long intervals heaving a single prolonged sigh.
And an hour later the dance was progressing as evenly as though nothing in the least extraordinary had occurred. The incident was closedāthat abrupt swoop of terror and impending death dropping down there from out the darkness, cutting abruptly athwart the gayety of the moment, come and gone with the swiftness of a thunderclap. Many of the women had gone home, taking their men with them; but the great bulk of the crowd still remained, seeing no reason why the episode should interfere with the eveningās enjoyment, resolved to hold the ground for mere bravado, if for nothing else. Delaney would not come back, of that everybody was persuaded, and in case he should, there was not found wanting fully half a hundred young men who would give him a dressing down, by jingo! They had been too surprised to act when Delaney had first appeared, and before they knew where they were at, the buster had cleared out. In another minute, just another second, they would have shown himāyes, sir, by jingo!āah, you bet!
On all sides the reminiscences began to circulate. At least one man in every three had been involved in a gun fight at some time of his life. āAh, you ought to have seen in Yuba County one timeāā āWhy, in Butte County in the early daysāā āPshaw! this tonight wasnāt anything! Why, once in a saloon in Arizona when I was thereāā and so on, over and over again. Osterman solemnly asserted that he had seen a greaser sawn in two in a Nevada sawmill. Old Broderson had witnessed a Vigilante lynching in ā55 on California Street in San Francisco. Dyke recalled how once in his engineering days he had run over a drunk at a street crossing. Gethings of the San Pablo had taken a shot at a highwayman. Hooven had bayonetted a French Chasseur at Sedan. An old Spanish-Mexican, a centenarian from Guadalajara, remembered Fremontās stand on a mountain top in San Benito County. The druggist had fired at a burglar trying to break into his store one New Yearās eve. Young Vacca had seen a dog shot in Guadalajara. Father Sarria had more than once administered the sacraments to Portuguese desperadoes dying of
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