by Jory Sherman
SHADOW RIDER
BLOOD SKY AT MORNING
JORY SHERMAN
For Arlie Weir
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Zak Cody cut sign that morning just after he passed…
Chapter 2
Zak holstered his pistol, climbed up onto the seat of…
Chapter 3
The memory of that day had come unbidden, dredged up…
Chapter 4
Major Willoughby read the short note attached to the back…
Chapter 5
The tracks were still fresh, clearly visible even in the…
Chapter 6
Zak knew how dangerous Felipe had become. He’d just been…
Chapter 7
Zak saw the flash out of the corner of his…
Chapter 8
Ben Trask poured two fingers of whiskey into Hiram Ferguson’s…
Chapter 9
The two men continued to argue. They had been at…
Chapter 10
That was the story Zak heard as told to him…
Chapter 11
Sergeant Leon Curtis bellowed down from the driver’s seat.
Chapter 12
The land shimmered under the furnace blaze of the sun.
Chapter 13
The Big Fifty.
Chapter 14
Lieutenant Theodore Patrick O’Hara dozed on the bunk, pretending to…
Chapter 15
Cloud shadows grazed across the land like the lingering and…
Chapter 16
Colleen fanned herself as she faced the class of Chiricahua…
Chapter 17
In the distance, across the eerie nightscape of the desert,…
Chapter 18
Ben Trask cursed the rising sun. He jerked the cinch…
Chapter 19
They rode through the night and into the dawn, Zak,…
Chapter 20
The eastern sky drained its blood, turned to ashes. Tiny…
Chapter 21
Trask pulled his hat brim down to shield his eyes…
Chapter 22
Zak clamped a hand over Colleen’s mouth and pushed her…
Chapter 23
Julio Delgado heard a sound. He looked up from the…
Chapter 24
Delbert Scofield finished smoking his cigarette, crushed it to bits…
About the Author
Other Books by Jory Sherman
Copyright
About the Publisher
Chapter 1
Zak Cody cut sign that morning just after he passed Dos Cabezas. The tracks were both disturbing and puzzling. There was blood, too, mixed in with the dirt and the rocks. At least six men, he figured, on unshod ponies, had lain in wait for the stagecoach. There were drag marks, and these led him to a gruesome discovery.
The bodies of two men lay spread-eagled on their backs near a clump of mesquite and cholla. Their throats were cut, gaping like hideous grins. Blue-bottles and blowflies crawled over the wounds and clustered on their eyes. The men were hatless and scalped. They wore army uniforms and they had been stripped of their sidearms.
Zak stepped off his horse to examine the dead men more closely. One of them, a young lieutenant with blond fuzz still on his face, had blood on his shirt, a few inches under his armpit. He pulled the shirttail out and saw the wound. It appeared the young man had been stabbed there. The other man wore a sergeant’s chevrons on his shirt. He had a dragoon moustache and there were small scars on his face that had long since healed. A fighter, from the looks of him. His nose had been broken at least once in his lifetime, which Zak judged to have been about forty years.
Moccasin tracks all around the bodies. Hard to tell the tribe. Chiricahua maybe. This was their country. The hair on both men’s heads appeared to have been pulled back to take their scalps, slit their throats. A few strands around the dollar-size patch where the scalps had been lifted were sticking straight up.
At least one of the men had voided when he died. The young lieutenant, he decided, when he bent over to sniff. He smelled like a latrine. The urine smell stung his nostrils, so they hadn’t been dead long. An hour, maybe less.
He set about deciphering the tracks, walking around the wagon’s marks where it had stopped. Wagon or stagecoach, he couldn’t tell for sure which just then. Six separate sets of horse tracks. Four horses, shod, pulling the wagon or coach. A depression where one body had fallen, close to the side. The driver, probably. On the other side, more marks, indicating a struggle, then another depression a few feet away from the wagon tracks.
Then the wagon had driven off. And it wasn’t trailing any of the unshod horses. Who had been driving? Why had he or they been allowed to leave? Was the lieutenant the target? The sergeant? Both? Strange, Zak thought.
He mounted up and continued down the road in the direction the wagon had gone. The pony tracks led off on another tangent. Business finished. Where had they gone? There was no way to tell without following the tracks. And even then, he might not know why they had attacked the wagon, or coach, and why they had just let it drive off. None inside the wagon had stepped down. He had accounted for all the tracks.
Yet someone had escaped.
Why?
Zak touched a hand to his face. Two days of stubble stippled his jaw. The hairs were stiff enough to make a sound like someone scraping a match head across sandpaper. He touched spurs to his horse’s flanks and left the smell of death behind.
The wind moved miniature dust devils across the land like dervishes on a giant chess board, with squares painted burnt umber and yellow ochre. Cloud shadows slipped across the rocky outcroppings and small spires like wraiths from some surreal dream, slinking and rippling over the contours of the desolate earth, making the land seem to pulse and breathe. Little lakes shimmered and vanished in the smoke of shadows, only to reappear again farther on in silver curtains that danced enticingly along the old Butterfield Stage route that wound through stone cairns and cactus like the fossilized path of an ancient serpent grown to gigantic size.
Zak Cody licked the black cracks on his lips, shifted the pebble in his mouth from one side to the other. His canteen was empty, all of the water inside him where it could oil his muscles, saturate his tendons. That was the Apache way, not the white man’s, who rationed water until he died of thirst, leaving his gaunt skeleton on the desert either through ignorance or an addled mind.
He found the first object beside the trail almost by accident. A glint of sun, something odd seen out of the corner of his eye. He rode over to see what was glittering so, thinking it a stone veined with mica or quartz. But there was a blue-green cast to it that defied immediate identification. It was small, and might have passed notice on an overcast day.
He reined in the black and dismounted. Stooping down, he picked up the dazzling object, turned it over in his fingers while he stared at it. There was gold on it, too, and he saw that it was a piece of jewelry. Woman’s jewelry. The gold band was attached to the precious stone, and there was a pointed shaft through the band. A woman’s earring, he determined, before he put it in his shirt pocket. A few feet away, almost hidden from view, he spotted the matching earring. He slid it into his pocket with the other one and climbed back into the saddle.
Now, what would a woman, possibly a refined woman, be doing way out in the middle of nowhere, miles from any sizable town, any town where a fine lady might wear such a fashionable accessory? Ahead, miles away still, was Apache Springs, and beyond that, Fort Bowie. He had seen the wagon tracks, knew how fresh they were, how many horses, four, were pulling it, and how fast they were going. Cody was a tracker, by both habit and training, so he always studied the ground wherev
er he rode his black gelding, a Missouri trotter, sixteen hands high. He called the horse Nox, knowing it was the Latin word for night.
A hawk floated over the road, dragging its rumpled shadow after it along the ground. It disappeared over a rise and a moment later he heard its shrill scree scree. The sound faded into the long silence of the desert, and then he heard only Nox’s shod hooves striking the hard ground.
A few moments later, he figured perhaps fifteen minutes had passed, he saw something else that was out of place in such surroundings. A flash of silver light bounced off it in one short streak, almost like a falling star going in the wrong direction, from earth to the heavens. He stopped and picked it up.
A bracelet, of silver and turquoise. Probably Tasco silver, from the way it was wrought, so finely turned, turquoise beads embedded in round casings that clasped them tight. A woman’s bracelet, graceful and elegant, such as a refined lady might wear.
Zak crossed and recrossed the ruts in the ground, looking for more cast-off artifacts. Ten minutes later he found a necklace made of silver and turquoise, like the bracelet. He stopped long enough to retrieve it and put it in his pocket before he rode on. He kept his gaze on the broken land, scanning both sides of the road for any sign of movement, judging the age of the tracks, holding Nox to a steady, ground-eating pace, closing the distance between him and the four-wheeled vehicle.
He spat out the pebble when Nox gave a low whicker and his ears stiffened to cones, twisted in a semiarc. Apache Springs was close, he knew, and he began to drift wide of the road, but keeping it in sight. The tracks were very fresh now, and as he topped a small rise, the springs lay below him, a wide spot in the road, deserted except for the small coach that stood off to one side. A woman sat on the seat, alone, her head facing the opposite way.
He saw legs move between the horses. A man was checking the traces.
Zak rode toward the coach, his hazel eyes narrowed to thin dark slits. They flickered with little flecks of gold and light brown, specks of magenta. The man emerged from between the horse’s legs, and the woman turned and stared straight at him. A hand went up to her mouth and she stiffened on the seat.
“Ho there,” Zak called as he rode down to the springs, wending his way through the ocotillo and prickly pear. There was a legend painted on the side of the coach: FERGUSON’S STAGE AND FREIGHT COMPANY. Underneath, in smaller letters: HAULING, PASSENGER SERVICE. And, in still smaller letters: Hiram Ferguson, Prop. Zak had seen such before. Ferguson operated out of Tucson, ran lines down to Bisbee, over to Vail and up to Safford. He sometimes connected with freight out of Tucson, since he went places nobody much wanted to go in that part of the country.
The man stepped away from the horses. He was wearing a linen duster, pale yellow in color, and his hat brim was folded to a funnel that shielded his eyes.
“Howdy, stranger,” the man said. “See any hostiles?”
Zak looked at the woman, then back at the man. Suspicion crept through his mind like some small night creature, sniffing, probing, twitching its whiskers. Something about the way the man was standing, the way he held his arms out, slightly bowed, away from his sides. And the woman, just in that brief glance, seemed paralyzed with fear. Fear was something Zak could almost smell, as if it gave off a scent, more subtle than sweat but as distinctive as fumes from a burning match.
“Hostiles?” Zak slowed his horse, halted it a few feet from the man, the coach, the cowering woman.
“You know. Apaches. We run into a hell of a patch back there.”
The man inclined his head in the direction that the coach had come from. Zak noticed he didn’t lift a hand to point a finger.
“No,” Zak said. “I saw no Apaches.”
“Well, they’s about.”
Zak reached into his pocket, fingered the bracelet. He pulled it out, dangled it like bait on a hook from his left index finger. He looked straight at the woman.
“You lose this?” he said.
The woman uttered a small breathy “Oh,” and her face drained of color. She glanced quickly at the man on the ground, the man in the duster, standing at the head of the four horses.
“She didn’t lose nothin’,” the man said, and he glanced up at the woman. The look he gave her was so quick it might have escaped notice from the average person. But Zak caught it. He caught the warning, the puzzlement. “Well, now, she might have,” the man said. “Where’d you find it?”
“I asked her,” Zak said, his voice flat as a leaf spring.
Zak moved the bracelet up and down. Lances of bright light shot from its faceted surface as he twirled it to catch the sun.
“Or maybe you lost this,” Zak said, fishing one of the earrings from the same pocket. “Or this, the other one.” He held up the second earring.
The woman rubbed her wrist. It was paler than the rest of her skin, a place where a bracelet might have been worn. Then she touched her neck.
Zak put the other pieces back in his pocket, pulled out the necklace. He dangled it like some gewgaw he was hawking, his gaze taking in both the man and the woman.
“Pretty, ain’t it?” he said in an exaggerated drawl, as if he were some backwoods drummer bent on a sale.
“None of them’s hers,” the man said, stepping away from the horses, into the open. He kept his feet apart in a belligerent stance.
“Mister, you seem to be doing all the talking. Is the lady deaf and dumb?”
The man brought his hands back, brushing the duster away from his pistol grips. He wore two guns, like some drugstore cowboy. He bent slightly into a menacing crouch.
“You take your jewelry and ride on,” the man said. “The lady ain’t interested.”
“Here, you take it,” Zak said, and tossed the necklace into the air. It made a high arc, and the man reached up to grab it.
Zak climbed down from his saddle just as the man caught the necklace. He stood facing the man.
“Think you’re pretty smart, don’t you?” the man said.
Zak said nothing. He stood straight and level-eyed, staring at the man.
“I think that necklace belongs to the lady,” Zak said.
“I think you’re full of shit, mister.”
The man dropped the necklace onto the ground. His hands hovered like a pair of hunting hawks above his pistols, a pair of converted Navy Colts.
“You’ll want to think about drawing those pistols,” Zak said, making no move toward his own, a Walker Colt converted from percussion to center-fire.
“Why is that?”
“Because,” Zak said, “I’m the quicksand under your feet.”
The man’s eyes widened, then flashed with anger.
His hands dove for his pistols.
Zak’s right hand streaked down toward his own holster.
The man’s hands grasped the butts of his pistols. He started to draw them from their holsters. He seemed fast.
An eternity winked by in a single split second and Zak’s Walker cleared leather. A snick-click as he hammered back, the sound cracking the silence like the first rattle of a diamondback’s tail.
Zak held his breath, squeezed the trigger. The Colt bucked in his hand as it exploded with orange flame, belching out golden fireflies of burnt powder and a .44 caliber lead slug that slammed into the man’s chest just as the muzzles of his pistols slid free of their holsters.
A crimson flower blossomed on the man’s chest. His breastbone made a crunching sound as the ball smashed into it like a thousand-pound pile driver.
He dropped to his knees. His hands went slack and the pistols slid from his grasp and hit the ground. He opened his mouth to speak, and blood enough to fill a goblet gushed from his mouth.
He never took another breath and pitched forward, dead weight succumbing to gravity.
The woman let out a short cry.
A thin tendril of gray smoke spooled from the barrel of Zak’s gun, scrawling in graceful arabesques before the wind shredded it to pieces that vanished like some
sleight-of-hand illusion.
Zak reached down and picked up the necklace, held it up so the woman could see it.
“This yours?” he said, his voice as soft as kid leather.
The woman’s eyes rolled back in their sockets and she slumped down on the seat in a sudden swoon.
Chapter 2
Zak holstered his pistol, climbed up onto the seat of the old Concord. The woman lay on her back, her eyes closed, her face drained of color, a grayish tint around her lips. She was a beautiful young woman, with coal black hair, a patrician nose, fine structure to her cheekbones and jaw. Her lips were full and lightly rouged, and her cheeks bore a faint tint of vermillion, just enough to enhance her smooth, unblemished skin.
Zak straddled her, took her chin in one hand. He leaned down and blew gently on her face, then placed his hands on her shoulders and shook her.
“Ma’am, ma’am,” he said, his voice low, slightly husky.
Her eyelids fluttered, then opened, closed quickly again.
The sun splashed on her pale face. She wore no bonnet and a strand of hair drooped over her forehead like a brown tassel. She wasn’t down deep, he decided. Just floating beneath the surface of wakefulness. Maybe afraid to free herself from the darkness. Afraid of what she might see, of what might happen to her if she opened her eyes and kept them open.
“Miss,” he said. “You can come to, ma’am. I’m not going to hurt you.”
Her eyelids quivered. It was almost like a little spasm, a trembling manifested only on that part of her anatomy. As if, somewhere down where she was, she wanted to swim up, step from the dark ocean into the blinding sun. He wasn’t touching her, just straddling her, one knee on the floorboard for balance, the other leg pressing against the seat. He touched her face, smoothed his fingers down one cheek as if stroking her back to life in the gentlest way.