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Square Deal Sanderson by Charles Alden Seltzer
page 29 of 284 (10%)
talk like a man!"

The big man stiffened, and his eyes glittered malignantly. He moved
his feet slightly apart and let his body fall into a crouch. He held
that position, though, not moving a finger, when he saw a saturnine
smile wreathe Sanderson's lips, noted the slight motion with which
Sanderson edged Streak around a little, caught the slow, gradual
lifting of Sanderson's shoulder--the right; which presaged the drawing
of the heavy pistol that swung at Sanderson's right hip.

Both men held their positions for some seconds; and the slow, heavy
breathing of the big man indicated his knowledge of the violence that
impended--the violence that, plainly, Sanderson would not retreat from.

Then the big man's body began to relax, and a tinge of color came into
his face. He grinned, malevolently, with forced lightness.

"Hell," he said; "you're damned particular! I'm runnin' things here,
but I ain't Bransford!"

"I was reckonin' you wasn't," said Sanderson, mockingly. He now
ignored the big man, and fixed his gaze on one of the women--the one he
felt must be Mary Bransford.

He had found time, while talking with the big man, to look twice at the
two women--and he had discovered they were not women at all, but girls.
More, he had discovered that one of them looked as he had pictured her
many times during the days since he had heard of her from the Drifter.

She was standing slightly aside from the men--and from the other girl.
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