Brand Blotters - Page 97/180

A heel clicked in the alcove. For the first time Norris, or Boone as the

Southern girl had called him, became aware of a third party in the room.

Melissy was leaning out of the window. She called down to a man standing

on the street.

"Jack, come up here quick. I want you."

Boone took a step forward. "You here, 'Lissie Lee?"

She laughed scornfully. "Yes, I'm here. An unexpected pleasure, isn't

it?"

"Do you know Ferne Yarnell?" he asked, for once taken aback.

"It looks as if I do."

His quick furtive eye fell upon an envelope on the floor. He picked it up.

Upon it was written, "Miss Ferne Yarnell," and in the corner, "Introducing

Miss Lee."

A muscle twitched in his face. When he looked up there was an expression

of devilish malignity on it.

"Mr. Bellamy's handwriting, looks like." He turned to the Arizona girl.

"Then I didn't put the fellow out of business."

"No, you coward."

The angry color crept to the roots of his hair. "Better luck next time."

The door knob rattled. Someone outside was trying to get in. Those inside

the room paid no obvious attention to him. The venomous face of the

cattle detective held the women fascinated.

"When Dick Bellamy ambushed Shep he made a hell of a bad play of it. My

old mammy used to say that the Boones were born wolves. I can see where

she was right. The man that killed my brother gets his one of these days

and don't you forget it. You just stick around. We're due to shoot this

thing out, him and me," the man continued, his deep-socketed eyes burning

from the grim handsome face.

"Open the door," ordered a voice from the hall, shaking the knob

violently.

"You don't know he killed your brother. Someone else may have done it. And

it may have been done in self defence," the Arkansas girl said to Boone in

a voice so low and reluctant that it appeared the words were wrung from

her by torture.

"Think I'm a buzzard head? Why for did he run away? Why did he jump for

the sandhills soon as the word came to arrest him?" He snapped together

his straight, thin-lipped mouth, much as a trap closes on its prey.

A heavy weight hurtled against the door and shook it to the hinges.

Melissy had been edging to the right. Now with a twist of her lissom body

she had slipped past the furious man and turned the key.