The Bells of San Juan by Jackson Gregory
page 35 of 271 (12%)
page 35 of 271 (12%)
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Norton asked half a dozen further questions and then said abruptly:
"That's all. As you go out will you tell the boys to send Antone in?" Again a hint of color crept slowly, dully, into Galloway's cheeks. "You're going pretty far, Rod Norton," he said tonelessly. "You're damned right I am!" cried Norton ringingly. "And I am going a lot further, Jim Galloway, before I get through, and you can bet all of your blue chips on it. I want Antone in here and I want you outside! Do I get what I want or not?" Galloway stood motionless, his cigar clamped tight in his big square teeth. Then he shrugged and went to the door. "If I am standing a good deal off of you," he muttered, hanging on his heel just before he passed out, "it's because I am as strong as any man in the county to see the law brought into San Juan. And"--for the first time yielding outwardly to a display of the emotion riding him, he spat out venomously and tauntingly--"and we'd have had the law here long ago had we had a couple of men in the boots of the Nortons, father and son!" Rod Norton's face went a flaming red with anger, his hand grew white upon the butt of the gun at his side. "Some day, Jim Galloway," he said steadily, "I'll get you just as sure as you got Billy Norton!" |
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