Mustang Man (1966)
Page 8
We’ll just let you and Loomis do that for us!”
“You heard me, Ralph. Back up and let him alone.”
“I’m going to kill him, Pen. If he isn’t dead already, I’m going to kill him.”
“Ralph”—Pen spoke matter-of-factly—“you make the slightest move this way and I’ll not stop with breaking one leg—I’ll break them both and just let you lie there. Nobody would ever find you except the buzzards.”
Ralph must have believed her. I didn’t see how he could, but maybe he knew her better than I did. All that time, I simply couldn’t move. I was all sprawled out among the rocks, and I seemed to be paralyzed. I could hear, all right, and I could see, but I couldn’t move. But all the while I knew that if that girl had not stood there with a rifle, Ralph Karnes would have killed me.
After a bit, Penelope spoke, just loud enough for me to hear. “Mr. Sackett? Are you all right?”
Well, now, that was a foolish question. Did she figure that I’d be just a-lyin’ here if I was all right? I tried to speak, and finally made a kind of weak sound. Then I tried to move. I made a real effort, and I felt a sort of spasm go through me, but nothing else happened.
Then I heard her coming. At least, I hoped it was her.
She came down over the rocks as if she was born to them, and she kept looking around to see if anybody was closing in on her. Then she was standing near me and looking down, and I looked right into her eyes.
“You’re alive then,” she said, and then she kind of bent down close to me. “We can’t stay here,” she said. “He’ll be back with the others. He knows you’re hurt.”
She pulled my arm across her shoulder and tried to pull me up, but she wasn’t strong enough. My lips worked, and finally I managed to shape words. “Horse .. . get my horse.”
She got up quickly, and as quickly was gone.
Meantime I tried to move my head, and managed it, then wrapped my fingers around a rock and tugged. The rock held, and I moved myself a little. With care, I managed to work that hand up the side of a slab of rock, but I had no strength at all in it, and it fell back to my side. I couldn’t seem to make my fingers work as they should, and my head was starting to ache with a dull, heavy throb.
I didn’t think I was seriously hurt. Maybe I just didn’t dare think so, for to be badly hurt here was almost the same as being dead; yet I had been shot, hit in the head, it seemed, and had been temporarily shocked into some kind of paralysis.
To a man who has spent his life depending on his muscles and his reflexes, there could be nothing more frightening than the state I seemed to be in now. I’d made my living with strength, and with my skill in any kind of shooting, and without that, I had nothing. I’d never had no chance for schooling, and if I couldn’t count on my muscles there’d be nothing left for me.
I found I could work the fingers of the other hand like a claw, opening and closing them. I got my hand on an edge of rock and tugged myself up, one-handed, to a kneeling position.
I knew I had to get out of here. Those murdering Karneses would be coming a-hunting me. If I was dead they’d be wanting to see the body; and if I wasn’t, they had to know it and finish me off.
Penelope was coming back, leading the dun. I was surprised he had let her come up to him, he was that shy of strangers. But that girl had a way about her … and nerve too.
When the dun came alongside me he snorted nervously, smelling blood, which was trickling down my face now. I spoke softly to him. “Easy, boy, easy now.” With my one working hand I reached out and caught hold of the stirrup leather.
Penelope slipped her arm around my waist, and with her lifting and my grip on the stirrup I managed to pull myself erect. But when the horse took a step, I almost went to the ground; it was only Penelope’s tight grip that held me up.
We started to move off, my feet trying to work but dragging. We hadn’t made more than twenty feet before Penelope, glancing over her shoulder, let go of me, and I grabbed wildly with my one good hand to hang onto the stirrup.
Her rifle went to her shoulder and she fired in the same instant. Then she fired again. The dun was still walking dragging me toward the brush. “Go, boy, go!” I said to him, and he went. A shot came from somewhere and a bullet hit sand near me. Another shot, and it struck somewhere above me and the dun jumped, but I hung on until we got into a clump of jumper. Then I let go, and fell face down in the sand. Penelope shot once more, and then I heard her scrambling in the rocks. After that silence.
The dun had stopped among the trees, nostrils wide. My face was wet with blood and sweat, and I was trembling all over. My Winchester was in the boot, but I couldn’t reach it.
Had Penelope been shot? Everything was so quiet. The sun was hot. I could smell dust and blood and sweat. Reaching back, I got the thong off my Colt and fished it out and up where I could shoot.
Nothing moved, and there was not a sound. The dun switched his tail, nosed at some brush, then pricked his ears to listen. Struggling, I managed to lift my head. All I could see was roots and rock. Underneath me there was blood on the sand, my blood.
What had happened to Penelope? And where was Loomis? For some reason I hadn’t given a thought to him, nor to Flinch.
It was the Karneses who worried me. It must have been the Karneses shooting. And where was Steve Hooker and his outfit? For they must have heard the shooting if they were anywhere within miles, for sound carried on those wide plains.
Reaching out, I caught my fingers over a root and tugged myself closer to the trunk of a tree. It was a mighty slim tree, but I was in no position to argue about cover.
The worst of it was, I couldn’t see a thing. I had cover of a sort, but I couldn’t even see if anybody was moving out there. Was Penelope alive? Was she hurt? I’d no way of moving to find out—all I could do was lie there and wait, gun in hand.
The dun stamped his feet. Somewhere a pebble rattled. I shifted my gun and wiped my palm dry on my shirt. After a minute I put the gun down on a piece of bark and started to knead the muscles of the other arm, trying to get some life into it. My head ached heavily, but the bleeding seemed to have stopped. Presently I took up the gun again, fearing to risk any more time with it out of my hand.
The throbbing in my head had me wrinkling my brow against it, and my throat was dry, needing water. There was water in the creek, and in my canteen on the saddle, but one seemed as far off as the other.
Reaching out now, I gripped the trunk of the tree and pulled myself further along. It was much too quiet out there, and I was scared for Penelope. Looking out over the low brush and rocks, I searched for her, but could see no sign of her. I looked across the mouth of the canyon, and let my eyes move slowly across the rocky wall and the scattered boulders at the canyon’s mouth, then down on the tree-dotted flatland that sloped away toward the creek.
Nothing…
And then behind me I heard a faint movement. Turning my head, I looked across the small clearing among the trees and brush. The dun was standing head up, nostrils wide, looking toward my right. Stiffly, I turned my head.
Andrew was standing very still in a narrow space between two clumps of mesquite, a prickly pear almost waist-high in front of him. He was holding his rifle up, ready to shoot, and his eyes were moving along the thicker brush on my side, looking for me. And when he shot, he would shoot to kill.
Andrew Karnes was no more than sixty feet away, but I was drawn back under the low-growing juniper and it was not easy to see me. His eyes were shifting around quickly, like a weasel’s eyes, hunting something to kill.
My pistol was in my right hand, and I was looking back over my left shoulder. To shoot, I’d have to swing around, and that would make a noise. I had watched Andrew, and I knew he was quick as a cat—and there was no way I could move without giving him the first shot. I didn’t want to chance it at that range. So I just lay there, hoping he wouldn’t see me.
He came forward a step. His eyes went to the horse again, then began agai
n their restless search for me.
I was going to risk it. I would have to. When his eyes got down to the farthest rocks, I would roll over and fire. I wouldn’t be in the best shooting position, but I had no choice. It was him or me.
The dun stomped his hoof, and Andrew looked in that direction. Not wanting to take my eyes from him, I moved my left hand to a position under my left shoulder and pushed up, then I moved my right arm under my body.
Actually, I hadn’t an idea whether I could do it. Each movement was a gamble, and each might be my last. My left hand started across my body. My eyes were on Andrew; my right hand was coming forward … and then he saw me.
He must have failed to believe what he saw. Or maybe the shadows were thick enough so what he saw was indistinct, for there was an instant when he froze.
And then the rifle whipped to his shoulder.
Even as he moved, I moved; my left hand slapped the ground and my right thrust forward. My gun must have gone off an instant sooner, or perhaps he shot too fast, for the bullet whapped into the ground right where my body had been before the half-turn was completed.
My own shot was high. It cut a furrow across the top of his shoulder and his involuntary move jerked the rifle out of line. He levered another bullet into the chamber, but my second shot went right through his face. It was a miss, for I’d shot at his body, but the bullet went in under his eye and came out the back of his head.
He fell forward, all sprawled out, into that mess of prickly pear. The rifle, thrown forward as he fell, dropped into the sand beyond the patch of cactus. I held the gun on him, ready for another shot, even after I realized the back of his skull was gone.
Working feverishly, I poked the two spent shells from the cylinder and slipped two others in place. I listened, but I heard no sound. Catching hold of the branches of the tree, I pulled myself up, and was surprised that I could do it.
The shock that had temporarily put me out of action was wearing off.
My first move was for his rifle, for my own was on the dun, and I had no idea where brother Ralph was. Staggering, I got to the rifle and picked it up, then looked carefully around.
All was quiet again. How many ears had heard those shots and were now listening, I did not know. I only hoped that somewhere out there Penelope was able to listen.
My head still ached, and every step I took was made with caution, for I had no idea how bad a shape I was in. My fingers went to my skull. There was a deep furrow above my ear that had cut the scalp almost to the back of my head.
Leading my horse, for even if I could stay in the saddle I would be too easily seen, I started down the gradual slope, which flattened out toward the creek.
From time to time I paused, careful to conserve what strength I had.
Before riding away, I studied the area carefully, but there was no sign of life, no movement. What worried me most was that I had no idea what was going on, nor where anybody was. Penelope had been out there in the rocks somewhere, but she had vanished as if she had never been. And across there in the trees Ralph might still be waiting, to say nothing of that poisonous flower, Sylvie.
There were big old cottonwoods and willows along the creek, and there was water.
Once under the trees, I got down and took a long drink. I was hungry, but to risk a fire was to risk my neck. I wasn’t that hungry. More than anything else, I wanted to find a place under a safe tree and sleep, but there was no chance of that.
Near me was a huge old cottonwood whose thick leaves rustled and whispered endlessly. Glancing up, I noticed the huge branches and the idea came suddenly.
After tying my horse to a shrub, I rigged a quick sling for my rifle from a couple of piggin strings and then reaching up, I caught the lowest limb of the big tree. Its leaves and the other trees around me offered concealment, and I climbed carefully until I was about twenty feet off the ground and could see all around me.
The first thing I saw was a dust cloud. It was some distance off, downstream, and whoever was causing the dust was out of sight beyond the rocks. My guess made it about half a dozen riders.
Not far away I could see some bones, lying time-whitened under the sun. Were these the bones of Nathan Hume’s mule train? I remembered that there had been another battle, a hundred and fifty years before, when an army of Spanish pioneers whipped a huge band of Comanches at this place.
Chapter 9
It was very still. The only sound was the gentle rustling of the cottonwood leaves, which never seemed to be quiet. After a few minutes, just as I was about to get down from the tree, I saw Sylvie Karnes come down from the rocks riding a bay pony.
Now where had she gotten that horse? As I watched, she was followed by Steve Hooker, Tex Parker, and two other men whom I did not recognize. This looked to me like too much activity around for one lone Tennessee boy, even if he was a Sackett. My better sense kept telling me I should pull out of here, and fast.
Sylvie by herself was a package of dynamite, and I wanted no part of her. When they discovered Andrew dead—for it was likely they still did not know about it—they would have another reason for hunting me down.
Gold is a hard-won thing, and hard-kept, and when Nathan Hume bought smuggled gold from the Spanish miners in the San Juans he little knew what he was starting. Those old Spanish miners preferred to sell their gold in secret to traders like Hume, rather than have a big part of it taken from them by the Spanish or Mexican governments, to say nothing of the governors of New Mexico.
What Hume had started was being played out now, right here.
The group rode out on a little meadow about a quarter of a mile back from the creek and dismounted. They looked as if they were going to camp.
Carefully, I climbed down the tree. My neck was stiff and my head still throbbed with a dull, brow-wrinkling pain, but my muscles seemed to have loosened up.
Mounting up, I walked my horse down through the willows and across the creek, which here was only eight to ten inches deep.
The rest of the day I scouted around, searching for the box canyon. All I knew was that it was somewhere north of the Rabbit Ears, which was little enough to go on. And during all that day I stayed clear of the Karnes outfit, riding wide around. Now that they had tied up with Steve Hooker and the boys from Coe’s gang, my troubles were multiplied. Of course, I couldn’t wish the Coe gang any worse luck than making a deal with Sylvie. She was likely to poison the lot when she got the gold … if she got it.
When night came I was far out to the north, and I rode on a few miles and camped on a little creek that emptied into the North Canadian. As I was eight or nine miles from the Rabbit Ears I figured to be pretty safe, so I built myself a fire I could have covered with my hat, and made coffee and broiled myself a steak. I had plenty of fresh meat now, for earlier that day I had killed a yearling buffalo well over to the east.
Just as I was about to pour some coffee, the dun, who was drinking at the creek, suddenly jerked up his head, water dripping from his muzzle, and looked across the creek into the darkness. Before you could say scat I was back in the darkness with my Winchester cocked and ready.
“Hold easy on that trigger, son. I’m huntin’ help, not trouble.”
I knew that voice, and while I lay quiet trying place it in my memory, it spoke again.
“That horse knows me better’n he does you. I gave him to you.”
“Come on out then. Show yourself.”
“You’ll have to give me time. I’m hurt.”
Well, I taken a long chance. That voice did sound familiar, and only one man could know how I got that horse. So I went down to the creek and crossed it.
The old man lay in the grass on the far side of the creek, and he was in bad shape. He had been shot more than once, and his left hand was a bloody mess, but he was game. There was no quit in that old man. His kind come from away up the creek, and he was a tough old mossy-horn with a lot of life in him yet.
So I just picked him up and carried him back to
camp. He couldn’t have weighed more than a hundred and thirty soaking wet, and I’d never seen the day when I couldn’t pick up three times that much.
He was in bad shape, but it was his left hand that gave me the turn. Every fingernail was gone, and his ringers all bloody … and that could have been no accident.
“Comanches?” I asked.
“In-laws,” he said grimly. “Sometimes they can be worse.”
“You ain’t related to that Karnes outfit?”
“You met up with them?”
“Uh-huh.”
First off, I filled a cup with hot, black coffee and held it for him to drink.
He was shaky, and he needed something to pick up his spirits a mite. He drank it, taking it in his right hand, while I put on some water to heat up to clean him up with.
“Looks to me as if everbody on the Staked Plains is related,” I said, “and all of them after Nathan Hume’s gold.”
“I got a claim to it, better than any of the rest.”
“Better than Penelope?”
“You don’t say. She here?”
“Unless they’ve killed her, she is. She saved my bacon yesterday, and a fine girl she is.”
After he’d drunk the coffee he laid back while I washed out a couple of bullet wounds, neither of them serious, beyond the blood he’d lost. At least, I’d seen men survive worse ones. I always made shift to pack a few wrappings of bandage, for a man on the dodge can’t go running to no doctor. So I fixed up the wounds as best I could, and that hand along with it.
The fingernails had been missing for a while, but crawling through the brush he’d evidently torn open the wounds.
“You must have known something they wanted almighty bad.”
“I should smile, I did. I knew where that gold was. And I know just where that box canyon is.”
“I wonder they let you live.”
“They fired my place and then rode off, leaving me hog-tied in the house. I was out cold and they never figured I’d get out alive. Well, I fooled ‘em.”
“Seems like everybody in the country started after that gold all to once.”