The Sheriff's Son
"You think he would let her alone, then?"
The old-timer shook his head. "No, he would n't do that. But I reckon he'd try to postpone a decision as long as he could. Unless he destroyed her in the first rush of rage, he would n't have the nerve to do it until he had made himself crazy drunk. It all depends on circumstances, but my judgment is—if he had a chance and if he did n't think it too great a risk—that he would try to hold her a prisoner as a sort of hostage to gloat over."
"You mean keep her—unharmed?"
They were already in the saddle and on the road. Dave looked across at his white-faced friend.
"I'm only guessing, Roy, but that's the way I figure it," he said gently.
"You don't think he would try to take her across the desert with him to Mexico."
Ryan shook his head.
"No chance. He could n't make it. When he leaves the hills, Miss Rutherford will stay there."
"Alive?" asked Beaudry from a dry throat.
"Don't know."
"God!"
"So that whether Miss Beulah did or did not
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