the Rider Of Ruby Hills (1986)

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the Rider Of Ruby Hills (1986) Page 14

by L'amour, Louis


  Mulholland's face flushed and his eyes darkened with anger. "She ain't your kind," he persisted, "you bein' a killer and all."

  Rock Bannon stared at him. "You didn't seem to mind my killing Indians!" he said sarcastically. "In fact, you killed a few yourself!"

  "Don't get me wrong!" Cap persisted. "I ain't gainsayin' you ain't helped us! Without you I don't know if we could have beat off those Indians or not, but killin' Indians and killin' our own kind is a lot different thing!"

  "You're new to the West, Cap." Bannon's voice was rough. "In a short time you'll find there's men out here that need killin' a sight worse than Indians. In fact, I'm not so sure those Indians jumped us without help!"

  "What do you mean?" Mulholland demanded.

  "I mean," Bannon said, "that Morton Harper told you there'd be no hostile Indians on this route! I warned you of Buffalo Hide then, but he told you he ranged further north. You took his advice on this trail, not mine!"

  Pagones and Pike Purcell were coming up to join them. Pike heard the last remark, and his lean, lantern-jawed face flushed with anger.

  "You ridin' Harper again?" he harshly demanded of Bannon. "He said this was a better trail, and it is. We ain't had no high passes, and we had six days of the best travel we've had since we left Council Bluffs, with plenty of water and plenty of grass. Now we get a few bad days and a brush with Indians, but that ain't much!"

  He glared at Rock. "I'm sick of your whinin' about this trail and Harper! I figure he's a durned good man. He was sure a help to me when I needed it. Out of supplies, no medicine for the wife, and he staked me."

  "I wasn't talking to you," Rock replied shortly, "and I don't like your tone. As far as your loan from Harper, remember that you haven't heard from him on it yet. I've a hunch he'll collect, and plenty!"

  "I don't need no killer to tell me my business!" Pike snapped reining his horse around to face Rock. "And I ain't afeerd of no reputation for killin', neither. You don't bluff me none."

  "Here, here!" Cap protested. "We can't afford to have trouble in camp. You'll have to admit, Pike, that we'd have been in bad shape a couple of times in that fight if it hadn't been for Bannon. He's been a help. I don't agree with him on Mort Harper, either, but every man to his own idea."

  Rock swung the steel dust and cantered off toward the hills. Inwardly, he was seething. He was a fool to stay on with the wagon train-he understood that perfectly well. Not a man here liked him; not a man here talked to him except on business. He was not even a member of their train except by accident.

  They had found him at the crossing of the Platte. Riding, half dead, with two bullet wounds in his body, his horse ready to drop with fatigue, he had run up to the wagon train. Sharon Crockett had bedded him down in her wagon and cared for him, and he had ridden on in the same place where her father rode now.

  He had offered no explanation of his wounds, had talked but little. A grim and lonely man, gentle words came hard, and he could only look up into Sharon's face and wonder at her beauty, tongue-tied and helpless. Yet his hard, tough, trail-battered body was too used to pain to remain helpless for long. He had recovered rapidly, and afterward he had ridden along with the wagons, hunting for fresh meat and helping when he could.

  He was not a man who made friends easily, yet gradually the ice was melting, and the clan- nishness of the wagon train was breaking down. Twice he had even talked with Sharon, riding beside her wagon, speaking of the mountains and his own wild and lonely life. All that had ended abruptly that night beside the campfire at the fort.

  They had been seated around the fire eating supper, listening to the bustle of life around the fort, when a tall, handsome man rode up on a beautiful black mare.

  Perfectly groomed, his wide, white hat topping coal-black hair that hung to his shoulders, a drooping black mustache and a black broadcloth suit, the trousers tucked into hand-tooled boots, Morton Harper had been a picture to take any eye.

  Swinging down, he had walked up to the fire. "Howdy, folks!" His voice was genial, his manner warm and pleasant. In an instant his personality and voice had done what Rock Bannon's could not do in two weeks. He had broken down their reserve and become one of the group. "Headin' for California?"

  "Reckon we are," Mulholland had agreed. "We ain't rightly decided whether to stay on the Humboldt Trail or to swing north and go to Oregon."

  "Why go either way?" Harper asked. "There's a southern route I could recommend that would be much easier going for your womenfolks." His alert eyes had already found and appraised Sharon Crockett. "More water, plenty of grass, and no high mountain passes."

  Cap Mulholland looked up interestedly. "We ain't heard of no such pass, nor no such trail," he admitted. "How does she go?"

  "Man named Hastings scouted some of it, and I scouted the rest myself. It is a more southerly route, and within another few months all the travel will be going that way. Right now," he winked, "the trains that go that way are going to have a mighty fine trip of it. Very little dust except in one stretch, fine grass, lots of water. Also, the hostile Indians are all raiding far north of there along the traveled routes.

  "But," he added, "I can see you'll well led, and you'll no doubt learn about this trail yourselves. From the look of your teams I'd say you were lucky in your choice of a leader."

  Leaning against the hub of a wagon wheel, Rock Bannon ate in silence. The even, smooth flow of the stranger's language had an enchanting quality, but his own hard-grained, cynical character was impervious to mere talk.

  As the hours flowed by, Harper sat among them, pleasing the men with subtle flattery, the women with smiles. The reserve of the group thawed under his easy manner, and before long they began to discuss his trail and its possibilities, considering themselves fortunate to know of it first.

  There was some talk of putting it to a vote, but it was morning before it came to that. Until then, Rock was silent. "You'd do better," he interposed suddenly, "to stick to the regular trail."

  Harper's head came up sharply, and his eyes leveled at Bannon. "Have you ever been over the trail I suggest, my friend?"

  "Part way," Rock replied. "Only part of it."

  "And was that part easy going for oxen and horses? Was there a good trail? Grass? Water?"

  "Yes, I reckon it has all that, but I wouldn't advise it."

  "You say it is a better trail but you wouldn't advise it." Harper glanced around at the others, smiling tolerantly. "That doesn't make much sense, does it? I've been over the entire trail and found it very good going. Moreover, I can give you a map of the trail showing the waterholes, everything. Of course, it's nothing to me what route you take, but if you want to avoid Indians-" He shrugged.

  "What about Buffalo Hide?"

  Morton Harper's face tightened, and his eyes strained to pry Rock Bannon's face from the shadows in which he sat. "He's a Blackfoot. He ranges further north."

  Harper's eyes shifted to Mulholland. "Who is this man? I'm surprised he should ask about Buffalo Hide, as he isn't known to most white men other than renegades. I can't understand why he should try to persuade you to neglect an easier route for a more dangerous one. Is he one of your regular train?"

  Pike Purcell was abrupt. From the first day he had disliked and been suspicious of Bannon. "No, he ain't none of our crowd, just a feller what tied up with us back yonder a ways. He ain't got no wagon, nothin' but the horse he's ridin'."

  "I see," Morton Harper's face became grave with implied doubt. "No offense, friend, but would you mind telling me your name? I know most of the men along this trail, and Colonel Warren was asking about some of them only tonight. You'll admit it is safer to be careful, for there are so many renegades who work with the Indians."

  "My name's Rock Bannon."

  Morton Harper's lips tightened and his eyes grew wary. For a moment he seemed taken aback. Then as he perceived where his own interests lay, his eyes lighted with triumph.

  "Ah? Bannon, eh? I've heard of you. Killed a man in Laramie
a month or so back, didn't you?"

  "He drew on me."

  Rock was acutely conscious of the sudden chill in the atmosphere, and he could see Sharon's shocked gaze directed at him. The people of the wagon train were fresh from the East. Only Cap had been as far West as the Platte before, and he only once. They were peace-loving men, quiet and asking no trouble.

  Morton Harper was quick to sense his advantage. "Sorry to have brought it up, Bannon," he said smoothly, "but when a man advises a wagon train against their best interests, it is well to inquire into the source of the advice."

  Bannon got up. He was a tall man, lean hipped and broad shouldered, his flat-brimmed hat shadowing his face, his eyes glowing with piercing light as he spoke.

  "I still say that route's a darned fool way to go. This ain't no country to go wanderin' around in, and that route lays through Hardy Bishop's country. You spoke of Hastings. He was the man who advised the Donner party."

  As his footsteps died away in the darkness, the members of the wagon train sat very still, their enthusiasm suddenly dampened by that ill-fated name. They all knew the story. The horror of it still blanketed the trail with its bloody shadow of the party caught by snows in the high passes and starving until they resorted to cannibalism as a way out.

  Morton Harper shrugged. "Of course. They started on Hastings' trail, but left it too soon, and the route I suggest avoids all the higher passes." His eyes swung around the group, gathering their attention like the reins of a six-horse team, and he led them on with promises and suggestions, an easy flow of calm, quiet talk, stilling their fears, quieting their doubts, offering them grass and water instead of dust and desert.

  In the morning when they moved out, they took the trail Harper had advised, turning off an hour after they left the fort. He glanced back, and smiled when he saw he was unobserved. Then he wished them luck and promised to overtake them when a message came for which he waited. Turning, he galloped back to the fort.

  Rock Bannon was with them. He rode close to Sharon's wagon, and after a time she looked up. He had watched her the night before, had seen her fascinated eyes on Harper's face.

  "You don't approve, do you?"

  He shook his head. Then he smiled, somewhat grimly. He was a dark, good-looking man with a tinge of recklessness in his green eyes.

  "My views aren't important," he said. "I don't belong."

  "Pike shouldn't have said that," she said. "He's a strange man. A good man, but very stubborn and suspicious."

  "Not suspicious of the right folks, maybe."

  Her eyes flashed. "You mean Mr. Harper? Why should we be suspicious of him? He was only trying to help."

  "I wonder."

  "I think," Sharon said sharply, "you'd do better to be a little less suspicious yourself! You admitted this was a good trail!"

  "You haven't met Hardy Bishop yet. Nor Buffalo Hide."

  "Mr. Harper said that Indian was farther north." She looked at him. "Who is Hardy Bishop? You mentioned him before?"

  "He's a man who is trying to run cattle at Indian Writing. They said he's insane to try it, but he's claimed seventy miles of range, and he has cattle there. We have to cross his range."

  "What's wrong with that?"

  "If you cross it, maybe nothing, but Bishop's a funny man. He doesn't like strangers very much. He's going to wonder why you're so far south. He's going to be suspicious."

  "Well, let him be suspicious then!" Sharon said, her eyes bright and her chin lifting. "We don't care, and we won't bother him any. Does he think he owns the whole country?"

  "Uh-huh," Rock said. "I'm afraid he does. With some reason as far as that valley goes. He made it what it is today."

  "How could any man make a valley?" Sharon protested. "This is a free country. Anyway, we're just going through."

  The conversation had dwindled and died, and after a while he rode off to the far flank of the wagon train. Sharon's manner was distinctly stiff and he could see she was remembering that story of the killing in Laramie. After a few rebuffs he avoided her. Nobody talked to him. He rode alone and camped alone.

  It had remained like that for six days. They were six days during which Morton Harper's name became one to reckon with. The long green valley down which they moved was unrutted by wagon trains, the grass was green and waving, and water was plentiful. Harper's map showed an accurate knowledge of the country and was a great help. On the sixth day after leaving the fort, the Indians hit them.

  The attack came at daybreak. Rock Bannon, camping near a spring a half mile from the wagons, awoke with a start. It was scarcely light, yet he felt uneasy, and getting to his knees, he saw the steel dust staring, ears pricked, at a distant pile of rocks. Then he noticed the movement.

  Swiftly and silently he saddled the stallion, bridled it, and stowed his gear in the saddlebags. Then, rifle in hand, he skirted the trees along the tiny stream and headed back for the wagons. He rode up to them, and the man on guard got up, stretching. It was the short, heavy set Pagones. A good man and a sharp one. He smiled at Bannon.

  "Guess Harper had it more right than you when he said there were no hostiles here," he said. "Ain't that right?"

  "No," Bannon said sharply. "Get everybody up and ready. We'll be attacked within a few minutes!"

  Pagones stared. "Are you crazy?"

  "Get busy, man!" Bannon snapped at Pagones. He wheeled and running from wagon to wagon, slapped the canvas and said, "On your feet! Indians!"

  Men boiled from the wagons, crawling into their clothes and grabbing at rifles. "Get around the whole circle!" he told them. "They are in those rocks and a draw that runs along south of us."

  Mulholland rushed out and halted, glaring around. The sky was gray in the east, and everything lay in a vague, indistinct light. Not a movement showed in all the dark width of the prairie. He started for Bannon to protest, when he heard a startled exclamation. Wheeling, he saw a long line of Indian horsemen not over two hundred yards away and coming at a dead run!

  Even as his eyes touched them, the nearest Indian broke into a wild, shrill whoop! Then the whole charging line broke into yells.

  Rock Bannon, leaning against the Crockett wagon, lifted his Henry rifle and fired. A horse stumbled and went down. He fired again, and an Indian threw up his arms and vanished in the turmoil of oncoming horses and men, and then the other men of the wagon train opened up.

  Firing steadily, Bannon emptied his rifle before the Indians reached the edge of the circle. One brave, his wild-eyed horse at a dead run, leaned low and shot a blazing arrow into the canvas of the Crockett wagon. Rock fired his right-hand pistol and the Indian hit the dirt in a tumbling heap, just as a second arrow knocked off Rock's hat. Reaching up with his left hand, Rock jerked the burning arrow from the canvas. The fire had not yet caught. Then he opened up, firing his pistol, shifting guns, and firing again. The attack broke as suddenly as it had begun.

  Tom Crockett was kneeling behind a water barrel, his face gray. A good shot, he was not accustomed to killing. He glanced up at Rock, a sickened expression on his face.

  "I never killed nothing human before!" he said weakly.

  "You'll get used to it out here!" Rock said coldly. His eyes lifted to Sharon.

  "You saved our wagon!" she said.

  "It might have been anybody's wagon," he said brutally, and turned away. He counted seven dead Indians on the prairie. There were probably one or two more hidden in the tall grass. He could see several dead ponies. The Indian who had shot the flaming arrow lay not more than a dozen feet away. The bullet had gone through his stomach and broken his spine.

  Rock walked around. He had eyes only for the men. Cap looked frightened, but determined. Pagones had fired steadily and with skill. Bannon nodded at the short man.

  "You'll do," he said grimly.

  Pagones started to speak, started after him, and scowled a little. He was ashamed of himself when he realized he was pleased at the compliment.

  They were good men, Rock decid
ed. Purcell was reloading his rifle, and he looked up as Bannon passed, but said nothing. Rock walked back to the Crockett wagon. Cap was standing there, his rifle in the hollow of his arm.

  "Will they come again?" he asked.

  Bannon nodded. "Probably several times. This is Buffalo Hide. Those were his warriors."

  "But Morton said-" Crockett started to protest.

  Bannon looked around, and then he pointed at the dead Indian. "You goin' to believe Morton Harper or that?" he demanded. "That Indian's a Blackfoot. I know by the moccasins."

  This time they came in a circle, going around and around the wagon train. A volley of flaming arrows set two wagon tops afire. Rock stood at the end of the wagon and fired steadily, carefully, making every shot count.

  Dawn came with a red, weird light flashing in the east and turned the wagon colors to flame. Guns crashed, and the air was filled with wild Indian yells, and the acrid smell of gunpowder and burned canvas. Three times more they attacked, and Bannon was everywhere. Firing, firing, firing. Crockett went down with a bullet through his thigh. Bjornsen was shot through the head, and a warrior leaped from a horse into Greaves's wagon and the two men fought there until the Indian thrust a knife into Greaves's side. Bannon shot the brave with a snapped pistol shot, almost from the hip.

  The last attack broke, and the sun lifted into the sky. As if by magic the Indians were gone. Rock Bannon wiped the sweat from his forehead and stared out over the plain. Buffalo Hide had lost men in this fight. At least twenty of his braves were dead, and there would be wailing and the death chant in the Blackfoot villages tonight.

  Two horses and an ox had been killed. They gathered around, buried the two dead men and butchered the ox. Rock sat on a wagon tongue alone. Cap walked over to him. The man's face was round and uncomfortable.

  "Reckon you saved us, Rock," he said. "Don't rightly know how to thank you!"

  Bannon got up. He had been cleaning his rifle and reloading it while the men were buried. "Don't try," he said.

  Bob Sprague walked over and held out his hand. "Guess we haven't been very friendly," he said, "but you were right about the Indians."

 

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