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<h2> CHAPTER VII. The Open Door </h2>
<p>The proprietor of the Nugget and Rope, a German named Baum, not being
troubled with police rules, kept the door wide open for the purpose of
inviting trade, a proceeding not to the liking of his patrons for obvious
reasons. Probably not one man in ten was fortunate enough to have no one
“looking for him,” and the lighted interior assured good hunting to any
one in the dark street. He was continually opening the door, which every
newcomer promptly and forcibly slammed shut. When he saw men walk across
the room for the express purpose of slamming it he began to cherish the
idea that there was a conspiracy on foot to anger him and thus force him
to bring about his own death.</p>
<p>After the door had been slammed three times in one evening by one man, the
last slam being so forcible as to shake two bottles from the shelf and to
crack the door itself, he became positive that his suspicions were
correct, and so was very careful to smile and take it as a joke. Finally,
wearied by his vain efforts to keep it open and fearing for the door, he
hit upon a scheme, the brilliancy of which inflated his chest and gave him
the appearance of a prize-winning bantam. When his patrons strolled in
that night there was no door to slam, as it lay behind the bar.</p>
<p>When Buck and Red entered, closely followed by Hopalong, they elbowed
their way to the rear of the room, where they could see before being seen.
As yet they had said nothing to Hopalong about Pie's warning and were
debating in their minds whether they should do so or not, when Hopalong
interrupted their thoughts by laughing. They looked up and he nodded
toward the front, where they saw that anxious eyes from all parts of the
room were focused on the open door. Then they noticed that it had been
removed.</p>
<p>The air of semi-hostile, semi-anxious inquiry of the patrons and the smile
of satisfaction covering the face of Baum appealed to them as the most
ludicrous sight their eyes had seen for months, and they leaned back and
roared with laughter, thus calling forth sundry looks of disapproval from
the innocent causes of their merriment. But they were too well known in
Albuquerque to allow the disapproval to approach a serious end, and
finally, as the humorous side of the situation dawned on the crowd, they
joined in the laugh and all went merrily.</p>
<p>At the psychologic moment some one shouted for a dance and the suggestion
met with uproarious approval. At that moment Harris, the sheriff, came in
and volunteered to supply the necessary music if the crowd would pay the
fine against a straying fiddler he had corraled the day before. A hat was
quickly passed and a sum was realized which would pay several fines to
come and Harris departed for the music.</p>
<p>A chair was placed on the bar for the musician and, to the tune of “Old
Dan Tucker” and an assortment of similar airs, the board floor shook and
trembled. It was a comical sight and Hopalong, the only wallflower besides
Baum and the sheriff, laughed until he became weak. Cow punchers play as
they work, hard and earnestly, and there was plenty of action. Sombreros
flapped like huge wings and the baggy chaps looked like small, distorted
balloons.</p>
<p>The Virginia reel was a marvel of supple, exaggerated grace and the
quadrille looked like a free-for-all for unbroken colts. The honor of
prompter was conferred upon the sheriff, and he gravely called the changes
as they were usually called in that section of the country:</p>
<p>“Oh, th' ladies trail in<br/>
An' th' gents trail out,<br/>
An' all stampede down th' middle.<br/>
If yu ain't got th' tin<br/>
Yu can dance an' shout,<br/>
But yu must keep up with th' fiddle.”<br/></p>
<p>As the dance waxed faster and the dancers grew hotter Hopalong, feeling
lonesome because he wouldn't face ridicule, even if it was not expressed,
went over and stood by the sheriff. He and Harris were good friends, for
he had received the wound that crippled him in saving the sheriff from
assassination. Harris killed the man who had fired that shot, and from
this episode on the burning desert grew a friendship that was as strong as
their own natures.</p>
<p>Harris was very well liked by the majority and feared by the rest, for he
was a square man and the best sheriff the county had ever known. Quiet and
unassuming, small of stature and with a kind word for every one, he was a
universal favorite among the better class of citizens. Quick as a flash
and unerring in his shooting, he was a nightmare to the “bad men.” No
profane word had ever been known to leave his lips, and he was the
possessor of a widespread reputation for generosity. His face was
naturally frank and open; but when his eyes narrowed with determination it
became blank and cold. When he saw his young friend sidle over to him he
smiled and nodded a hearty welcome.</p>
<p>“They's shore cuttin' her loose,” remarked Hopalong.</p>
<p>“First two pairs forward an' back!—they shore is,” responded the
prompter.</p>
<p>“Who's th' gent playin' lady to Buck?” Queried Hopalong.</p>
<p>“Forward again an' ladies change!—Billy Jordan.”</p>
<p>Hopalong watched the couple until they swung around and then he laughed
silently. “Buck's got too many feet,” he seriously remarked to his friend.</p>
<p>“Swing th' girl yu loves th' best!—he ain't lonesome, look at that—”</p>
<p>Two shots rang out in quick succession and Harris stumbled, wheeled and
pitched forward on his face as Hopalong's sombrero spun across his body.
For a second there was an intense silence, heavy, strained and sickening.
Then a roar broke forth and the crowd of frenzied merry-makers, headed by
Hopalong, poured out into the street and spread out to search the town. As
daylight dawned the searchers began to straggle back with the same report
of failure. Buck and Red met on the street near the door and each looked
questioningly at the other. Each shook his head and looked around, their
fingers toying absentmindedly at their belts. Finally Buck cleared his
throat and remarked casually,</p>
<p>“Mebby he's following 'em.”</p>
<p>Red nodded and they went over toward their horses. As they were hesitating
which route to take, Billy Jordan came up.</p>
<p>“Mebby yu'd like to see yore pardner—he's out by Buzzard's Spring.
We'll take care of him,” jerking his thumb over his shoulder toward the
saloon where Harris's body lay. “And we'll all git th' others later. They
cain't git away for long.”</p>
<p>Buck and Red nodded and headed for Buzzard's Spring. As they neared the
water hole they saw Hopalong sitting on a rock, his head resting in one
hand while the other hung loosely from his knee. He did not notice them
when they arrived, and with a ready tact they sat quietly on their horses
and looked in every direction except toward him. The sun became a ball of
molten fire and the sand flies annoyed them incessantly, but still they
sat and waited, silent and apologetic.</p>
<p>Hopalong finally arose, reached for his sombrero, and, finding it gone,
swore long and earnestly at the scene its loss brought before him. He
walked over to his horse and, leaping into the saddle, turned and faced
his friends. “Yu old sons-of-guns,” he said. They looked sheepish and
nodded negatively in answer to the look of inquiry in his eyes. “They
ain't got 'em yet,” remarked Red slowly. Hopalong straightened up, his
eyes narrowed and his face became hard and resolute as he led the way back
toward the town.</p>
<p>Buck rode up beside him and, wiping his face with his shirt sleeve, began
to speak to Red. “We might look up th' Joneses, Red. They had been dodgin'
th' sheriff purty lively lately, an' they was huntin' Hopalong. Ever since
we had to kill their brother in Buckskin they has been yappin' as how they
was goin' to wipe us out. Hopalong an' Harris was standin' clost together
an' they tried for both. They shot twice, one for Harris an' one for
Hopalong, an' what more do yu want?”</p>
<p>“It shore looks thataway, Buck,” replied Red, biting into a huge plug of
tobacco which he produced from his chaps. “Anyhow, they wouldn't be no
loss if they didn't. Member what Pie said?”</p>
<p>Hopalong looked straight ahead, and when he spoke the words sounded as
though he had bitten them off: “Yore right, Buck, but I gits first try at
Thirsty. He's my meat an' I'll plug th' fellow what says he ain't. Damn
him!”</p>
<p>The others replied by applying their spurs, and in a short time they
dismounted before the Nugget and Rope. Thirsty wouldn't have a chance to
not care how he dealt the cards.</p>
<p>Buck and Red moved quickly through the crowd, speaking fast and earnestly.
When they returned to where they had left their friend they saw him half a
block away and they followed slowly, one on either side of the street.
There would be no bullets in his back if they knew what they were about,
and they usually did.</p>
<p>As Hopalong neared the corner, Thirsty and his two brothers turned it and
saw him. Thirsty said something in a low voice, and the other two walked
across the street and disappeared behind the store. When assured that they
were secure, Thirsty walked up to a huge boulder on the side of the street
farthest from the store and turned and faced his enemy, who approached
rapidly until about five paces away, when he slowed up and finally
stopped.</p>
<p>For a number of seconds they sized each other up, Hopalong quiet and
deliberate with a deadly hatred; Thirsty pale and furtive with a sensation
hitherto unknown to him. It was Right meeting Wrong, and Wrong lost
confidence. Often had Thirsty Jones looked death in the face and laughed,
but there was something in Hopalong's eyes that made his flesh creep.</p>
<p>He glanced quickly past his foe and took in the scene with one flash of
his eyes. There was the crowd, eager, expectant, scowling. There were Buck
and Red, each lounging against a boulder, Buck on his right, Red on his
left. Before him stood the only man he had ever feared. Hopalong shifted
his feet and Thirsty, coming to himself with a start, smiled. His nerve
had been shaken, but he was master of himself once more.</p>
<p>“Well!” he snarled, scowling.</p>
<p>Hopalong made no response, but stared him in the eyes.</p>
<p>Thirsty expected action, and the deadly quiet of his enemy oppressed him.
He stared in turn, but the insistent searching of his opponent's eyes
scorched him and he shifted his gaze to Hopalong's neck.</p>
<p>“Well!” he repeated uneasily.</p>
<p>“Did yu have a nice time at th' dance last night?” Asked Hopalong, still
searching the face before him.</p>
<p>“Was there a dance? I was over in Alameda,” replied Thirsty shortly.</p>
<p>“Ya-as, there was a dance, an' yu can shoot purty durn far if yu was in
Alameda,” responded Hopalong, his voice low and monotonous.</p>
<p>Thirsty shifted his feet and glanced around. Buck and Red were still
lounging against their bowlders and apparently were not paying any
attention to the proceedings. His fickle nerve came back again, for he
knew he would receive fair play. So he faced Hopalong once more and
regarded him with a cynical smile.</p>
<p>“Yu seems to worry a whole lot about me. Is it because yu has a tender
feelin', or because it's none of yore blame business?” He asked
aggressively.</p>
<p>Hopalong paled with sudden anger, but controlled himself.</p>
<p>“It's because yu murdered Harris,” he replied.</p>
<p>“Shoo! An' how does yu figger it out?” Asked Thirsty, jauntily.</p>
<p>“He was huntin' yu hard an' yu thought yu'd stop it, so yu came in to lay
for him. When yu saw me an' him together yu saw di' chance to wipe out
another score. That's how I figger it out,” replied Hopalong quietly.</p>
<p>“Yore a reg'lar 'tective, ain't yu?” Thirsty asked ironically.</p>
<p>“I've got common sense,” responded Hopalong.</p>
<p>“Yu has? Yu better tell th' rest that, too,” replied Thirsty.</p>
<p>“I know yu shot Harris, an' yu can't get out of it by makin' funny
remarks. Anyhow, yu won't be much loss, an' th' stage company'll feel
better, too.”</p>
<p>“Shoo! An' suppose I did shoot him, I done a good job, didn't I?”</p>
<p>“Yu did the worst job yu could do, yu highway robber,” softly said
Hopalong, at the same time moving nearer. “Harris knew yu stopped th'
stage last month, an' that's why yu've been dodgin' him.”</p>
<p>“Yore a liar!” shouted Thirsty, reaching for his gun.</p>
<p>The movement was fatal, for before he could draw, the Colt in Hopalong's
holster leaped out and flashed from its owner's hip and Thirsty fell
sideways, face down in the dust of the street.</p>
<p>Hopalong started toward the fallen man, but as he did so a shot rang out
from behind the store and he pitched forward, stumbled and rolled behind
the bowlder. As he stumbled his left hand streaked to his hip, and when he
fell he had a gun in each hand.</p>
<p>As he disappeared from sight Goodeye and Bill Jones stepped from behind
the store and started to run away. Not able to resist the temptation to
look again, they stopped and turned and Bill laughed.</p>
<p>“Easy as sin,” he said.</p>
<p>“Run, yu fool—Red an' Buck'll be here. Want to git plugged?” shouted
Goodeye angrily.</p>
<p>They turned and started for a group of ponies twenty yards away, and as
they leaped into the saddles two shots were fired from the street. As the
reports died away Buck and Red turned the corner of the store, Colts in
hand, and, checking their rush as they saw the saddles emptied, they
turned toward the street and saw Hopalong, with blood oozing from an
abrasion on his cheek, sitting up cross-legged, with each hand holding a
gun, from which came thin wisps of smoke.</p>
<p>“Th' son-of-a-gun!” cried Buck, proud and delighted.</p>
<p>“Th' son-of-a-gun!” echoed Red, grinning.</p>
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