Ranson's Folly by Richard Harding Davis
page 62 of 268 (23%)
page 62 of 268 (23%)
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side pocket of his coat. "What's the matter with your right hand?"
Ranson asked. "Are you holding a gun on me? Really, Mr. Cahill, you're not taking any chances, are you?" Ranson gazed about the room as though seeking an appreciative audience. "He's such an important witness," he cried, delightedly, "that first he's afraid I'll poison him and he won't drink with me, and now he covers me with a gun." Reluctantly, Cahill drew out his hand. "I was putting the bridle on my pony last night," he said. "He bit me." Ranson exclaimed sympathetically, "Oh, that's too bad," he said. "Well, you know you want to be careful. A horse's teeth really are poisonous." He examined his own hands complacently. "Now, if I had a bandage like that on my right hand they would hang me sure, no matter whether it was a bite, or a burn, or a bullet." Cahill raised the glass to his lips and sipped the whiskey critically. "Why?" he asked. "Why? Why, didn't you know that the paymaster boasted last night to the surgeons that he hit this fellow in the hand? He says--" Cahill snorted scornfully. "How'd he know that? What makes him think so?" "Well, never mind, let him think so," Ranson answered, fervently. "Don't discourage him. That's the only evidence I've got on my side. He says he fired to disarm the man, and that he saw him shift his gun to his left hand. It was the shot that the man fired when he held his gun in his left that broke the colonel's arm. Now, everybody knows I |
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