<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_SEVENTEEN" id="CHAPTER_SEVENTEEN">CHAPTER SEVENTEEN</SPAN></h2>
<h3>"BUD AND JELLY; ONE OR BOTH"</h3>
<p>With two of the boys—Mark Hanley and Bob Leverett—on guard over the
bodies of Bat Johnson and Ed White, the remainder of the party returned
to the house in a thoughtful mood. Certain small details puzzled them,
and Bud appeared to be the most worried man among them, though he did
not say much. What he did do was give Gelle a meaning glance and tilt
of the head when no one was looking, and then stroll out to the well
some distance away and down hill at that—too many ranchers seeming to
believe that the cook needed exercise. In a couple of minutes Gelle
came walking circumspectly down the slope, his face twisted with pain
of moving.</p>
<p>"What's eatin' on yuh, Bud? Thought I told yuh I got about four inches
of rib wound around my backbone," he complained, as he came up.</p>
<p>Bud's eyes were somber as on the day of the bank tragedy, and he gave
no sign of sympathy—proof of how worried he was.</p>
<p>"Jelly, there's going to be a kick-back in this thing if we aren't
mighty careful. Bradley and Delkin are wondering right now how polite
they can be about Palmer's money being gone. Are you sure he came
straight here to the house from town?"</p>
<p>"Yeah, I saw him ride up to the gate and open it and ride in. I wish
now I'd throwed down on the ole coot before he got into the house. I'd
'a' saved me a busted rib. But I was scared maybe the rest was right
behind him, Bud, an' I wanted to git 'em all. Gittin' Palmer inside the
house, what I done to him wouldn't be publick. That's what comes of
bein' a hawg," he added grimly. Then he came back to the meat of Bud's
question. "Why, Bud, is Palmer's cash missin'?"</p>
<p>"Yes, and Bat Johnson and Ed White were dead before they reached the
ledge. They didn't have any money to speak of; a little chicken feed in
their pants pockets was all. Our boys don't know where the stuff was
hidden, and I went with Delkin and the others to town and came back
with them. So you see, Jelly—"</p>
<p>"Yeah, I see, all right." Gelle's eyes went cold as they bored into
Bud's mind. "Well, what d' you think about it yourself, Bud?"</p>
<p>"I?" Bud looked at him straight. "Whatever you say, Jelly, goes with
me."</p>
<p>Gelle stared longer, exhaled a long breath and relaxed to a mirthless
grin.</p>
<p>"I oughta lick you, Bud, fer needin' my word. But friendship wabbles
when there's money in sight, so—I never went near the damn' place
after I packed that back-load of gold away from it. You was behind
me—behind us all, fer that matter." Gelle's sudden grin turned a
little sardonic. "Still, whatever you say goes with me! I kin be as
good a friend as you kin, Bud."</p>
<p>Bud had to laugh, though he felt little enough like it.</p>
<p>"You win, Jelly. I'd have had to do some quick work, but I suppose it
would have been humanly possibly for me to duck back up the ledge, grab
Palmer's money and come along with it until I saw a place to ditch it
where I could come back after it. Fast work—but I did stand in the
fringe of the trees by the ledge and watch the stables here until you
fellows were out of sight. I wanted to make darn sure you weren't seen."</p>
<p>"Well, I didn't go back either. But the fact remains that the cache is
cleaned out—in a hurry, by the look of things around there. And these
two dead men dropped in the open, just inside the gate and before they
had been to the ledge. For one thing, Jelly, our boys weren't so very
far behind them, so Bat and Ed wouldn't have had time to get the stuff,
hide it somewhere else and then get into a fight over it and kill each
other off before our boys came. They'd have had to do faster work than
I would to have raided the cave while you fellows crossed the open down
there."</p>
<p>"And awn the other hand, you fellers rode off and left me in easy
walkin' distance of the money, and the old man sound asleep and
snorin'." Gelle reasoned it out soberly, stating the evidence against
himself quite as impartially as Bud had done in his own case. "Yea, I'm
the pelican, too, that told Delkin to grab the works. Looks like I'm
bogged, right now, and sinkin' fast. Bud, on the face of it, you an' me
both is guilty as hell. Ain't we?"</p>
<p>"On the face of it, yes." Bud studied the evidence while he finished
rolling a cigarette. "Of course, we can't tell yet just how it will
affect the case against Palmer. Not at all, maybe. That's something we
have nothing to do with. I wanted you to know the money Delkin left in
the cache was gone—how much, none of us know, of course. It's mighty
mysterious, don't you think? Say, Jelly, what about those shots? Are
you dead certain you heard more than five?"</p>
<p>"Shore I am. But I couldn't prove it, Bud—not in a thousand years.
Snowball, his word ain't no good, so there y' are. I believe in my
heart that somebody else was after that boodle and Bat and Ed White,
they run into 'em, goin' after it theirselves. But that ain't proof.
Say, Bud, d' you s'pose Butch Cassidy rode over on the quiet—"</p>
<p>"I've been thinking of Butch. He's that stripe, and so is the rest of
the Frying Pan outfit in my opinion. But as you say, Jelly, opinions
aren't proof. Besides, Skookum says he didn't tell Butch where his
grandfather had his money hidden. I'll take the kid's word. He wouldn't
lie—not to me, or any one he likes. Butch tried to pump him, all
right, but Skookum says he didn't tell Butch anything much that we
didn't hear in the cook house."</p>
<p>"Did the kid say what ole Palmer's money was—gold or paper or
whatever?"</p>
<p>"He said he saw a lot of gold money in a sack. You were looking over
Delkin's shoulder, Jelly. What did it look like to you?"</p>
<p>"Gold. Jest about what the old thief would take and hide, Bud. Prob'ly
most of it was stole, and bills has got numbers on. Then again, gold
ain't spoilable. What you laughin' at, Bud?"</p>
<p>"At us, Jelly. Delkin certainly must know Palmer's money was in gold.
And Lark's loaded up with gold coin—"</p>
<p>"So we got our alibi right there, Bud. Fur's that goes, the Fryin'
Pan's got some honest gold money."</p>
<p>"And there is <i>their</i> alibi. And Delkin is sure to consider Lark's gold
as an out for us, just as we can believe that Butch would account for
any gold he flashed."</p>
<p>"Can't we ketch 'im? Why don't you take out after 'em an' see if you
can't pick up their trail? Gosh, Bud, if the money's gone, you 'n' me
<i>knows</i> Butch musta glommed it. I'd go, only fer this damn' rib."</p>
<p>"Better have one of the boys hitch up a rig and take you into town,
Jelly. Old Doc Grimes isn't much force, but he ought to be able to
fix you up all right. I'll take Bob and see if we can't pick up their
trail. He'll keep his mouth shut."</p>
<p>"Yeah. Talk is what we want damn' little of, Bud. One word is all them
pelicans would need to send them down into the breaks—and I ain't a
doubt in the world but what they got hide-outs down in there where
they kin live a year if they feel that way, and never show a head. You
beat it now, Bud. I'll gwan down an' take Bob's place. I kin walk slow.
An' I'll have some lie thunk up fer Delkin an' Bradley, time they git
t' askin' questions about you. They're so tickled to git their claws on
Palmer that they won't say much. We'll let on like you 'n' Bob had t'
go home fer somethin'. I'll fix it."</p>
<p>At the house Delkin and Bradley were having quite enough to occupy
their minds without watching the coming and going of the Meadowlark
boys. Palmer was conscious, sitting up in a chair and getting somewhat
the best of an amateurish third degree which Delkin and Bradley were
attempting to give him. Palmer had a wet towel tied around his head,
and the loose folds collected extra moisture and sent it trickling
down his seamed, sallow face and his collar. Palmer's eyes were just
as human as a snake's with an opaque, impersonal glitter that masked
effectually the thoughts shuttling back and forth in his brain. Now and
then he barked a question of his own which proved how well his brain
was working in spite of the gash on his head.</p>
<p>"Killed two of my men, ay? Come on to my ranch and shot down two men in
cold blood—that what you're tryin' to tell me I'm responsible fer?"</p>
<p>"We didn't shoot your men," Delkin explained, when he should not have
replied to the charge. "They shot each other. They were after the loot
from the bank, and they're lying down there inside your pasture fence,
waiting for the sheriff to look them over when he gets here. Even you
thieves and murderers can't hang together, it seems. They meant to get
the plunder and leave you in the lurch."</p>
<p>"Plunder? What plunder is that?"</p>
<p>"The stuff you folks stole from the bank—"</p>
<p>"Looky here, Mr. Delkin. You be careful what you say! It ain't safe to
make charges you ain't prepared to prove. I'm just remindin' you now
that there's a law that takes care of malicious slander. I can't answer
fer Bat an' Ed, but I want you to understand the bank owes me over
seven thousand dollars that I had on deposit—and that was stole—so
you claim. You been hand-in-glove with the Meddalark right along, and
I'm the loser by it. Ef I was you folks, I wouldn't shoot off my mouth
too much about that bank robbery."</p>
<p>Delkin and Bradley withdrew to talk it over, and it was then they
discovered that Bud and Gelle were missing. With Tony and Jack Rosen
on guard at the house, they hurried down to the pasture and found Gelle
reclining in the grass with his hat over his eyes to shield them from
the slanting rays of the sun, and Mark Hanley sitting cross-legged
beside him, killing time by carefully whittling a stick to a sharp
point and cutting the point off so that he could sharpen another; an
endless occupation so long as the stick lasts.</p>
<p>"Bud? Him an' Bob, they went home quite a while ago. Us boys can't all
of us be away more 'n a few hours at a stretch, an' Lark had give them
first four a coupla days off. I jest come awn in with Bud fer the day,
but now I'm kinda laid out so I can't ride, and Bob, he went home in my
place." Gelle vouchsafed a glance apiece to Delkin and Bradley before
he let the hat drop down again over his face. They could not know,
of course, that beneath the hat his lips were twitching with ironic
laughter.</p>
<p>"Yeah, they been gone half an hour, mebbe more," Mark contributed idly.
"How long do we have to set here an' keep them unlovely dead from
feelin' lonesome?"</p>
<p>Without answering, Delkin turned and walked back to the house, Bradley
following close.</p>
<p>"What do you think about it, Jim?" Bradley asked, when two thirds of
the distance had been covered.</p>
<p>"Brad, it doesn't matter what we think or don't think," Delkin told
him irritably. "We'll do well to keep it to ourselves, no matter what
it is. We won't mention Palmer's money to the sheriff, Brad. The
Meadowlark boys have done a lot for the bank—we mustn't overlook that.
I suppose they felt they had a right to collect their own damages from
Palmer for starting all that talk about them."</p>
<p>"They?"</p>
<p>"Bud and Jelly; one or both. I wouldn't think Bud would have had time
to do it, or the inclination. But you can't tell what's going on in
a man's mind. Jelly, of course, had the chance and he's the one that
suggested taking it. No, sir, we've got to keep our mouths shut for the
present, anyway."</p>
<p>"Let it look like them two down there—Bat and Ed White—got away with
it," Bradley suggested, all in favor of protecting customers as good as
the Meadowlark outfit. "We've got Palmer dead to rights, anyway, and
we've got the bank property back. I guess we can afford to let Palmer
hunt his own money, eh?"</p>
<p>"They were both in on it," Delkin went on glumly. "I saw them holding
a little private confab down by the well. Bud felt as if he'd better
get the stuff into the Basin, I guess, before we asked him about it.
But damn' it, Brad, I can't believe either of those boys would steal
money!"</p>
<p>"You heard Jelly. They don't call it stealing, Jim, when they annex
something that a thief has cached away. Buried treasure, maybe, is
what they'd call it. Anyway, they'd have a name that made it sound all
right. Well, we'll have to let it go for the present. But I wish they'd
kept their hands off that money!"</p>
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