Produced by Curtis A. Weyant
KEITH OF THE BORDER
A TALE OF THE PLAINS
By Randall Parrish
Author of "My Lady of the North," "My Lady of the South." "When Wilderness Was King," etc.
CONTENTS
I The Plainsman II The Scene of Tragedy III An Arrest IV An Old Acquaintance V The One Way VI The Escape VII In the Sand Desert VIII The Wilderness Cabin IX The Girl of the Cabin X Mr. Hawley Reveals Himself XI The Fight in the Dark XII Through the Night Shadows XIII The Ford of the Arkansas XIV The Landlady of the Occidental XV Again Christie Maclaire XVI Introducing Doctor Fairbain XVII In the Next Room XVIII Interviewing Willoughby XIX A Glimpse at Conspiracy XX Hope Goes to Sheridan XXI The Marshal of Sheridan XXII An Interrupted Interview XXIII An Unexpected Meeting XXIV A Mistake in Assassination XXV A Reappearance of the General XXVI A Chance Conversation XXVII Miss Hope Suggests XXVIII The Stage Door of the Trocadero XXIX By Force of Arms XXX In Christie's Room XXXI The Search for the Missing XXXII Fairbain and Christie XXXIII Following the Trail XXXIV Again at the Cabin XXXV The Cabin Taken XXXVI The Duel in the Desert XXXVII At the Water-Hole
KEITH OF THE BORDER
A TALE OF THE PLAINS
Chapter I. The Plainsman
The man was riding just below the summit of the ridge, occasionally uplifting his head so as to gaze across the crest, shading his eyes with one hand to thus better concentrate his vision. Both horse and rider plainly exhibited signs of weariness, but every movement of the latter showed ceaseless vigilance, his glance roaming the barren ridges, a brown Winchester lying cocked across the saddle pommel, his left hand taut on the rein. Yet the horse he bestrode scarcely required restraint, advancing slowly, with head hanging low, and only occasionally breaking into a brief trot under the impetus of the spur.
The rider was a man approaching thirty, somewhat slender and long of limb, but possessing broad, squared shoulders above a deep chest, sitting the saddle easily in plainsman fashion, yet with an erectness of carriage which suggested military training. The face under the wide brim of the weather-worn slouch hat was clean-shaven, browned by sun and wind, and strongly marked, the chin slightly prominent, the mouth firm, the gray eyes full of character and daring. His dress was that of rough service, plain leather "chaps," showing marks of hard usage, a gray woolen shirt turned low at the neck, with a kerchief knotted loosely about the sinewy bronzed throat. At one hip dangled the holster of a "forty-five," on the other hung a canvas-covered canteen. His was figure and face to be noted anywhere, a man from whom you would expect both thought and action, and one who seemed to exactly fit into his wild environment.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Keith of the Border by Randall Parrish
- 2: Yet irregular ridges occasionally cut across
- 3: And as he had slept three hours at Cairnes
- 4: Just beyond that ragged bunch of cottonwoods
- 5: Keith pressed steadily forward
- 6: And that horse had been newly shod
- 7: And the plainsman swung himself into the saddle
- 8: Keith could not fully determine what this mission might be
- 9: When Keith returned again to consciousness
- 10: A moment Keith seemed to hesitate
- 11: Keith turned to front the stern
- 12: Keith was essentially a man of action
- 13: Den after dat I jest natchally drifted
- 14: A conjunction ob circumstances
- 15: No theory of commonplace robbery
- 16: I'se sho' gwine ter be yo' nigger
- 17: Keith possessed unusual strength
- 18: Keith glanced about at the other's dim
- 19: Moving straight down the gully
- 20: Keith felt of the object Neb held forth
- 21: Burrowed under the partial shelter of a sand dune
- 22: And shook Neb into semi consciousness
- 23: And Keith laughed uneasily at the negro's fears
- 24: Clutching at the rude mantel above the fireplace
- 25: Keith hesitated just an instant
- 26: You may call me Christie Maclaire
- 27: You said he was in business in Carson City
- 28: And I reck'n dar wan't no finer man ebber libed
- 29: Which Neb had already appropriated
- 30: Keith completely forgot his own peril
- 31: Hawley evidently interpreted her silence as hesitation
- 32: Keith heard the movements of Hawley
- 33: Hawley gave utterance to one cry
- 34: From this moment I shall forget Christie Maclaire
- 35: That she was Christie Maclaire he had no question
- 36: A very part of that grim desolation surrounding them
- 37: I had never heard him called Hawley before
- 38: And I half believe Hawley to be their leader
- 39: That may even account for the blue haze out yonder
- 40: The well shaped head firmly poised
- 41: And Keith forebore any direct questioning
- 42: A playin' av yer dirthy thricks
- 43: Keith slipped back into the darkness
- 44: Wid the gyurl Oi've got tindin' to it
- 45: We both called her Christie Maclaire
- 46: But I reckon she's Christie Maclaire all right
- 47: The murder at the Cimmaron Crossing
- 48: Disappearing to morrow cowboys
- 49: Eating such grub my name's Fairbain Joseph Wright Fairbain
- 50: He said he had started for Santa Fe light
- 51: And doesn't feel satisfied regarding the report of the posse
- 52: But Keith heard him lift the latch of the door
- 53: To Keith this was the explanation
- 54: While he reached out the other after Christie Maclaire
- 55: Had it not involved both Hawley and Miss Hope
- 56: And reminding Hawley at once of Christie Maclaire
- 57: Hickock and Keith did that job all alone
- 58: First off he went out to the Cimmaron Crossing
- 59: Tell me ye was Christie Maclaire
- 60: Returning immediately to his pad
- 61: She shook her head energetically
- 62: Fairbain swore discreetly under his breath
- 63: To explain to Fairbain who she actually was
- 64: Maybe you knew him Jack Keith
- 65: Hickock watched the man disappear up the stairs
- 66: An Interrupted InterviewMiss Christie Maclaire
- 67: In vain Miss Maclaire protested
- 68: Doctor Fairbain gave me your message
- 69: Hawley may indeed possess papers of great value
- 70: Miss Maclaire observed the movement
- 71: I judge so 'Black Bart' Hawley
- 72: Until Doctor Fairbain chanced to mention your name
- 73: His hands clinched on the rail
- 74: Was your call upon Miss Maclaire very interesting
- 75: He thought he was dealing with Christie Maclaire
- 76: I assure you no she is strictly Miss Maclaire
- 77: Hawley stood leaning against the bar
- 78: Suddenly a flash of red fire spurted into the night
- 79: Scott might have departed for good
- 80: For few in Sheridan knew the lad
- 81: ' and de black debble he laughed
- 82: Waite believed Hawley possessed them
- 83: And Keith accepted it with swift determination
- 84: But Keith was first to break the stillness
- 85: Hawley had planted his seed deep and well in fruitful soil
- 86: I had the pleasure of taking supper with Miss Maclaire
- 87: She was telling me about Hawley
- 88: The names Bartlett and Phyllis had no clear meaning
- 89: And when she leaves the theatre
- 90: Conclusively proving that Miss Maclaire
- 91: Keith could not disguise his admiration
- 92: They barely entered the outer circle of the Trocadero lights
- 93: I respect your feelings toward Miss Maclaire
- 94: Fairbain struggled to his feet
- 95: You mean the saloon near the depot
- 96: Hawley took everything for granted
- 97: There is nothing for us to do but skip
- 98: Hawley must have expected the resistance
- 99: And Fairbain swung himself forward
- 100: How long have you known this man Hawley
- 101: And Fairbain sprang forward instantly between them
- 102: Doctor Fairbain knows something of me
- 103: Then Miss Maclaire is Hope Waite's half sister
- 104: The sheriff was bending instantly above the corpse
- 105: Fairbain had originally joined the searching party
- 106: But didn't you really care for Hawley
- 107: Whether or not you really cared for any of those duffers
- 108: To take Miss Maclaire with him
- 109: They're too blame busy out on the Arickaree
- 110: Never swerving a yard from the faint trail
- 111: Let's see whar the bunch went from yere with thet split hoof
- 112: And we'll go into Carson City and reoutfit
- 113: Their faces streaked from perspiration
- 114: They rounded the corral fence on hands and knees
- 115: Bristoe crawled back like a snail
- 116: Lie down here behind these saddles
- 117: Bristoe forced it from the sockets
- 118: And permit Hawley to be made captive
- 119: But honor the honor of the South
- 120: The thought brought his blurred eyes again to the horizon
- 121: He saw Hawley go stumbling down
- 122: The riderless horses gazed at the two figures
- 123: Bristoe cast an appealing glance at Fairbain
- 124: Keith finding it hard to speak
