Galloway (1970)

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Galloway (1970) Page 14

by L'amour, Louis - Sackett's 16


  “My mother was Irish. I’m named for her brother who was a policeman in Boston.”

  He glanced at Sackett. “What are you named after? A berry?”

  “A preacher … a circuit-ridin’ preacher. He gave me a prayer book at my christening.”

  “You ever read it?”

  “Sure. I know all the prayers. Trouble is, I never used ‘em enough. I can quote the Bible by the chapter. My ma was a great one for camp meetings.”

  “You come to town alone?”

  “Why not? I don’t need any help.”

  “You may. Here come the Dunns.”

  Logan Sackett glanced out of the window, then finished pouring his beer.

  “There’s only five or six of them. No use spoiling the fun by having Galloway along.”

  “You’re not entirely alone,” Berglund said. “I just saw Nick Shadow step into the store.”

  Bull Dunn got down off his horse. Ollie Hammer looked slowly around, then got off his horse.

  Logan took a swallow of the beer. “Berglund, if there’s anything in this place you don’t want busted you better duck it out of sight. I have an idea those Dunns are hot for trouble.”

  The first one through the door was Tin-Cup Hone. He saw Logan Sackett and stopped dead. “Howdy, Tin! You’re a long way from home, and you’ve got a horse.”

  “What’s that mean?” Hone said warily.

  “A man with a horse who’s so far from home ought to be riding it,” Logan said cheerfully.

  “I’ll stay.”

  “All right. When I go to funerals I always admire to see a handsome corpse.

  They’ll fix you up real pretty, Tin.”

  Red had come in from the back door. “Take his advice, Hone. I got that advice one time and I pulled out. I ain’t never been sorry.”

  “He’s alone, ain’t he?”

  “No, Tin, he ain’t. Nick Shadow’s down the street, and Nick is just plain poison with a six-gun and he’s one of the kind who just don’t care. He’s like the mule who butted his head into a tree, an’ somebody asked if he couldn’t go around it and they answered sure, but he just didn’t give a damn. Shadow is like that. Did you ever buck a man who just plain don’t care? Everybody dies but him. I seen it before.”

  Hone walked slowly to the bar. “There’s six men out there and four more a-coming up. Not even Logan Sackett and Nick Shadow can buck them odds.”

  Red chuckled. “You ain’t countin’ me. I been on the wrong side too often. This time I’m on the right ride. I think I’m as good as you, Tin.

  “And I’ll tell you something else. Galloway was cuttin’ a tree down in the breaks by the river and when he came out he saw you Dunns a-coming. Right now him and Parmalee and that breed of theirs, Charlie Farnum, they’re right over yonder in the livery stable.”

  “Gimme a beer,” Tin-Cup said. “It’ll be thirsty, riding.”

  “Drink it on your horse,” Logan said, “they’re going to open the ball.”

  Bull Dunn came through the door. He saw the back door closing after Tin-Cup Hone and he turned his cruel eyes on Logan. “Heard about you,” he said.

  “I usually fight with a gun,” Logan said, “but this time I’m going to whip you with my hands.”

  Dunn glanced at him, disgusted. “Don’t be a fool. Nobody ever came close.”

  “Maybe they didn’t do it right,” Logan said, and hit him.

  He had put the beer down on the bar and he simply backhanded Bull Dunn across the mouth, smashing his lips. Bull Dunn was huge and powerful, but Logan Sackett, while considerably lighter, was almost as tall and a man with huge shoulders and chest. His blow did not even stagger Dunn when it mashed his lips, but Logan let the impetus of the blow turn him, so he threw a left hand at Bull’s head. The bigger man pulled his head aside and grabbed Logan with his huge arms.

  Logan shoved the butt of his palm under Bull’s chin, forcing his head back, then he struck him twice in the ribs and shoved him off. Dunn struck out hard and knocked Logan into the bar, then charged him, head down and swinging. Logan rolled free, smashed a wicked short right to the side of the face that split Bull’s ear, showering him with blood.

  Bull turned like a cat, landed left and right to the head and rammed in again, but Logan slapped a hand down on Dunn’s head, thrusting it down to meet Logan’s rising knee. Dunn staggered back, his nose and mouth a gory wreck.

  Then toe-to-toe they began to slug, smashing punch after punch, neither man trying to evade, each one soaking up punishment. Logan was a little the faster, Dunn the heavier and perhaps the stronger. It was rough, brutal, and beautiful to watch. People crowded into the room. Up and down they went. Logan pulled free and knocked Bull Dunn down with a smashing right, but the big man lunged up from the floor, grappled Logan about the hips and lifted his body clear of the floor, then slammed him down across a table, which crashed beneath them. Bull dove at him, but Logan hit him with a short right to the face, then heaved him off. Both men came up together. Dunn swung a kick for Logan’s groin, and Logan brought his knee up across in front of him, blocking the kick.

  Then he walked in, smashing blow after blow to Dunn’s face. Bull broke away, charged again and threw Sackett hard. Dunn jumped for Logan’s face with his boots and Logan rolled aside. He got to his feet in time to meet Dunn’s rush.

  Again they stood slugging, grunting with every punch. Shirts torn and faces bloody, they swung and swung, but Logan was slowly pushed back by the larger man’s brute strength. Back he went down the room, then suddenly he seemed to weaken, and fell back against the bar.

  Seeing victory, Dunn set himself and drew back his fist for a finishing punch, and Logan Sackett, who had faked his weakness, threw a short inside right. It dropped like a hammer to Dunn’s chin inside of his swing, and stopped the big man flatfooted. Stunned, Bull Dunn stood, his fist poised, and then Logan Sackett punched short and hard with both fists—a left to the face, then a ripping right uppercut to the midsection.

  Dunn’s knees sagged and Logan Sackett whipped another right to the face.

  Bull went down. He hit the floor on his knees and Pete Dunn screamed as if stabbed. “No! No, pa! They can’t lick you! Nobody can!”

  Bull Dunn lunged up, dazed and shaken, staring blindly for his enemy. Logan Sackett was pouring beer into a glass, and Dunn lunged at him. Logan Sackett lifted a foot to fend him off—boot against Dunn’s chest, knee bent. Then he straightened the knee and Dunn staggered back and fell again.

  Logan Sackett rinsed his cut mouth with a swallow of beer, then gulped it down.

  “Stay down, you damn fool,” he said. “You’re game enough.”

  Bull Dunn stared up at him. “I wish … I wished I could get up, damn you, I’d—”

  “Have a beer,” Logan said. “You fight pretty good.”

  He walked over and taking the bigger man’s arm, helped him to his feet where he half fell against the bar. Logan shoved a beer in front of him. “It’s cold,” he said. “Tastes good after a fight, and before a long ride.”

  Bull looked at him. “You don’t need to grind it in,” he said. “I should have listened to Rocker.”

  It was hot in the street outside. Nick Shadow stood in front of the livery stable, well out of sight. Galloway was in the doorway, staying in the shade to see better. The sound of fighting from the saloon was finished.

  “Somebody won,” Shadow said, “and somebody lost.”

  Parmalee came from the store. “I guess it’s all over,” he said.

  “Not quite,” Ollie Hammer said, “not quite.”

  “Why not?” Parmalee suggested. “It’s finished in there. If your people won they’d be out here in the street, looking for the rest of us.”

  “What about your crowd? Won’t they come out?”

  Parmalee smiled. “They know we can handle it,” he said calmly.

  “You? You dude? You’re leavin’ it to Shadow, or that cousin of yours, or whatever he is.”

  “Second co
usin, I believe. Oh, they could handle it all right, Hammer, but if you prefer me, I’m at your pleasure. Draw when you will.”

  “Now there’s the gent,” Ollie Hammer said, ” ‘draw when you will’ ” he mimicked.

  “All right I’ll—”

  His hand flashed for his gun.

  Parmalee’s gun was an instant faster, his shot smashed Ollie’s gun hand and the gun fell into the dust. “And to show you that was intentional,” Parmalee said, and he fired again, the bullet smashing the gun’s butt as it lay in the dust. “I really don’t want to run up a score, Hammer,” Parmalee said. “I’m a ranching man, not a gunfighter.”

  “You ain’t seen the last of this,” Ollie Hammer said. “Huddy is still up on the mountain. When he’s finished there won’t be a Sackett left. And then there’s Rocker.”

  Parmalee put his gun back in the holster and walked across to Galloway. “What about it? Shall we go up there and help Flagan?”

  “Flagan don’t need help. And right now he knows he’s up there alone. He can shoot at anything that moves. If we go up it’ll just complicate things. Leave him be.”

  He hitched up his pants. “Let’s all go home. We got some siding to build. We’re goin’ to have a barn-raisin’ soon, and we’re going to build us a house.”

  Galloway gestured toward the hills. “I want to come out of a morning and look up at those hills and know nothing can be very wrong as long as there’s something so beautiful.

  “My pa used to say that when corruption is visited upon the cities of men, the mountains and the deserts await him. The cities are for money but the high-up hills are purely for the soul.

  “I figure to live out my life right here where I can hear the water run and see the aspen leaves turn gold in the autumn and come green again with spring. I want to wake up in the morning and see my own cattle feeding on the meadow, and hear the horses stomping in their stalls. I never had much chance for book learnin’, but this here is a kind of book anybody can read who’ll stand still long enough. This here is the La Plata country, and I’ve come home.”

  Chapter XVIII

  The wind sang a broken song among the sentinel trees. Below the scattered outposts were massed the dark battalions of the pines like an enemy ready to march against me, and somewhere along the lower edge of that black line lay the man who held the rifle that had shot me, and the bullet with which he intended to kill me.

  Vern Huddy had the taste of blood upon bis lips, and was a-thirst for more, and I lay with my body torn by his bullet, shuddering with every bream, my coat gone and night a-coming on, waiting for him to make his move.

  Only thing good about it was that he didn’t know exactly where I was. His bullet got me most of an hour before as I dove for shelter, but I’d wormed and scrambled and crawled some little distance since then.

  I gouged snow from the almost frozen remains that had backed up against a rock near me. I let a handful melt in my mouth and felt the delicious coolness of it going down my throat, through my body.

  Moving stones from under me I piled them around, digging myself deeper against the cold and Huddy’s bullets. The weakening was upon me, and for two hours before the bullet hit I’d been driven and outflanked at every turn by a man who was a past master at his trade, and who knew now that I was somewhere along timberline with nowhere else to go. In his heart he was sure he was going to get me.

  This was my last stop. Whatever happened must happen here. I told myself that and I believed it. I could not go back because it was a wide-open space and even in the night there would be enough light to see me against that gray-white expanse.

  The hole made by the bullet I had plugged with moss, and now I was waiting for him to come in for the finish. If he came before I passed out I might get him, and if not he would surely get me.

  It was growing dark. Down in the valleys below it was already dark and people were sitting down to their tables to eat warm suppers in pleasant surroundings.

  Meg Rossiter was down there preparing supper for her pa, or helping, and around the campfire my brother and the others would be wondering where I was.

  Easing my long body to a better position, I waited. He did not know where I was and I did not know where he was, and each needed to know. Squirming deeper into the gravel, I shivered against the cold. It was growing late in the year and at this, nearly twelve thousand feet of altitude, it could become icy by night.

  This was a different peak from the night before, unknown to both of us. They called it Parrott or Madden … the two were side by side and I was not sure which we were on. I didn’t know the country that well.

  Digging a fragment of jerky from my pack, I began chewing on it. That pack of mine was almost flat, just a place to carry a few pieces of bread and meat to sort of tide a man over.

  I’d lost a good bit of blood and the shock of the bullet had been great. It seemed to have struck the top of my hipbone, knocking me down and numbing my leg, but then it had glanced into the flesh and had gouged a deep hole.

  Even if Huddy did not get me I’d be lucky to last the night. The blood drained from me and the icy cold would take care of that. Suddenly something moved, and leaving my rifle alone I drew my pistol … how could he have come so close!

  There was a low whine … that damned wolf!

  How could he have followed me up here? But why not? He seemed to be haunting me.

  Now I’ve known wild animals to do some strange things. I heard of a panther one time who followed a boy two miles through a dark forest only a few feet behind him, the boy talking to it all the while thinking it was his dog. Then he called out to the house and when they opened the door they all saw the panther … it ducked off into the brush.

  I taken a small bit of the jerky from my pack and said quietly, “Here, boy!” And tossed it out there.

  Eager jaws took it, and I could hear the chewing. I began talking to it in low whispers, and calling it to me. After a long while it did come, crawling over the bank on its belly as if it knew enough to keep down, and then waiting while I talked to it. Suddenly it crawled closer.

  Seen up close, even in the almost dark, it looked like a wolf and yet not quite like one. In fact, it might have been half dog. My hand reached out to it. The wolf growled a little, but warningly rather than threateningly, then it sniffed of my fingers, seemed reassured and crept closer. I put a hand on it, then listened, but heard nothing. My hand brushed the thick ruff and started to scratch.

  “My God!”

  The expression was startled from me, for around the neck of the wolf was a collar, a collar so tight the poor animal was almost strangled!

  “Why, you poor devil!” I reached for my knife and talking to it all the while, slipped the knife under the collar. The wolf began to gag and choke, but he seemed to know I was trying to help, and then that razor-sharp blade cut through the collar and it came loose.

  The effort taken a good bit from me, but I lay there, whispering to that wolf that he’d be all right now. The poor thing had been follerin’ me around for all this time, figuring I could help it. Must be that some man had at one time had it for a pet, had put the collar on when it was small, and the wolf had gone back to the woods or maybe the man had died. Then the wolf had grown and grown until the collar was choking it. No wonder it was so hungry for the small fragments I threw out. It could swallow them.

  I kept my hand on the ruff and kept talking to it, and oddly enough, the wolf showed no idea of leaving. He crept closer, and even licked my hand. And the first thing I knew I’d fallen to sleep.

  It must have been the warmth of the big animal lying close thataway, and part of it was that my attention had been torn from the main issue and I forgot about staying awake. Anyway, I slept.

  And then I heard a low, ugly growling alongside of me and suddenly I was awake.

  Just the glimpse of the stars showed it was past midnight.

  “Quiet, boy!” I whispered, putting a hand on the wolf, and it quieted down,
but its ears were pricked and it was looking right straight ahead.

  Me, I eased my pistol out and rolled away from the wolf so if I drew fire it would not get hit. He was coming in. I heard a foot grate against gravel and then he was there, black against the sky.

  The wolf suddenly sprang away and his gun came up and I said, “Don’t shoot. It was just a wolf.”

  “A what?”

  “A timber wolf,” I said. “He’s a friend of mine.”

  “You’re crazy,” he said. “Out of your head.”

  “You going to kill me now?” I asked, conversationally.

  “And enjoy it,” he said, “and then I’m going down to see Meg. Nobody will ever find you up here. I’ll just leave you for that wolf or whatever it is.”

  My pistol was in my hand but he hadn’t seen it. He was standing about a dozen feet away and he had a rifle and he was holding it in one hand pointing it at me. It began to look like a Mexican stand-off, with both of us dying up here.

  “Ever see a wolf come to a man before, Huddle?” I said. “If you’ll stop and think, that there’s impossible. Up in the mountains of Tennessee we know all about wolves and such, like ha’nts and werewolves.”

  He was suddenly still, like he almost stopped breathing. “That’s fool talk,” he said. “I’m going to kill you, Sackett.”

  “If you do,” I said, “you’ll never get off the mountain. That there’s what the Indians call a medicine wolf. He’ll get you sure. Tear you to bits … unless you got a silver bullet.”

  “You’re lying!”

  There was a low growl from the bushes to his right, and as he spun slightly toward the sound I lifted my gun and shot him.

  His rifle went off and spat sand into my face. His movement must have deflected it just by a hair, just enough to save my bacon. He was down, but I could see the glint of the rifle barrel as he moved it toward me. I shot him again.

  The rifle fell from his hands as he rolled over on his side. I stood up. “No!

  No!” he whispered. “Oh, no, no!”

  “You gave it to a good many, Huddy,” I said. “You shot that poor Indian who worked for me, shot him when he didn’t even know, and when no enemies were around. He never had a chance to lift a hand. Now you know how it feels.”

 

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