the Trail to Seven Pines (1972)

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the Trail to Seven Pines (1972) Page 13

by L'amour, Louis - Hopalong 02


  Even allowing for the fact that they might manage to catch one or two horses, the 3 G outfit would be afoot by noon of the next day. Night would revive what horses they had to some extent, but they would not be ready to take the hard riding expected of them.

  Putting the places together, Hopalong could get a rough idea of what John Gore had planned. Evidently he did not know that Cassidy had recalled his riders, and expected to hit them early and fast, wiping them out two or three at a time. Evidently something had gone wrong, for they had a very late start. If his guess was correct, then from Willow Springs the outfit would have gone either north to Mandalay or south to Poker Gap. If they got to Mandalay they would find no horses awaiting them, nor were there any left at Rabbit hole.

  If they struck toward the south and Poker Gap, they would probably get fresh horses there, yet there was just a chance they might still be encamped at that place, waiting.

  That he had guessed correctly, Hopalong did not know. Nor had he guessed that he himself was expected to put in an appearance at the Gap, guided there by Dan Dusark.

  That had been John Gore's plan and he had talked it over with his riders. That his failure to reappear spelled disaster, they could not know.

  The 3 G riders drifted into Poker Gap on badly whipped horses shortly before sundown.

  Leaving their mounts in a box canyon, they built a fire and prepared supper. From a hilltop Hankins kept watch on the trail for Cassidy, and so it was that about the time Hopalong had turned toward Poker Gap, Hankins spotted a lone rider.

  Hankins could not identify the man, still some distance off, and it was easy to see that by the time the rider arrived it would be completely dark. Sliding off the hill, he went back to the campfire and explained the situation to Con Gore and Clarry Jacks, who were sharing command in the absence of John. He assumed the man to be Cassidy and said as much.

  "He'll bed down nigh the spring," Con said. "It isn't likely he'll move on in this dark. We'll get him then."

  "Wasn't Dusark supposed to be with him?" Troy objected.

  "Somethin' maybe happened to change it. Anyway, the only thing matters is he's here.

  Keep quiet and give him time to bed down. How far away is that spring, anyway?"

  "Half mile, maybe," Boucher said. "Can't be much more than that."

  "Wonder what became of them riders that was supposed to be at Willow?" Leeman wanted to know. "I don't like that. We got started late and that Cassidy is up to somethin'."

  Clarry leaned back and lighted a cigarette. "Forget it, Dud. You worry too much.

  We're all here, aren't we? What can he do?"

  "John isn't here," Boucher said. "I don't like that."

  "Aw, he's probably home by now," Con said. "He'll know we're on the trail. No use to worry."

  As he spoke, John Gore was building a fire in the cookhouse stove at Corn Patch.

  Hot, tired, and dusty, he had staggered on blistered feet from the mountains to the town. At the saloon he found both men dead. Without touching either body, he went to the cookhouse, where he began to prepare a quick meal.

  Meanwhile, Ben Lock had appeared at Poker Gap on a trail of his own. Earlier that day he heard the rumor of a rich gold strike made by Clarry Jacks in a mine above Star City. He reached the same conclusion that Hopalong had reached earlier. The way to dispose of the stolen gold was to find it in another mine.

  Melted down and in a new bar, it would be impossible to identify. By this means the gold could be handled through the normal channels, and apparently the rumor stemmed largely from the talking of Pony Harper. Ben Lock listened and reflected that Jacks had been loafing about town or riding with Gore, and there had been no time to hunt for gold. Nor had he, to his knowledge, been anywhere near Star City in the past week or so.

  Like Hopalong, Lock had decided the crux of the whole matter was the disposal of the gold itself. Bar gold was not so easily handled as the uninitiated might suspect, and through illegal channels it would call for at least a forty percent discount.

  On the surface there was no connection between Clarry Jacks and Pony Harper. They were rarely seen together and seemed to have nothing in common. Actually, Lock was convinced that they represented a strong combination and that the 3 G outfit was merely playing into their hands. John Gore was a violent, easily angered, and dogmatic man. Inclined to be contemptuous of Clarry Jacks, he failed to recognize the sharp, cunning mind behind the gunman's easy laughter and good looks.

  During the night after the gunfight at Corn Patch, Jacks had ridden into town and stopped briefly at Harper's office, entering by an alley door. Ben Lock had been watching that door, and Jacks's arrival filled him with satisfaction. Starting from scratch, with no previously formed opinions of the town or its people, he had swiftly leaped to the conclusion that Pony Harper was both a politician and a crook of the first water. When Clarry Jacks left town, Ben Lock was close behind him. The trail led to Poker Gap.

  Darkness found the range alive with a sense of approaching strife. John Gore was finishing his meal in the cookhouse at Corn Patch. Ben Lock made camp at Poker Gap Spring, and the 3 G lookouts who saw him arrive leaped to the conclusion that he was Hopalong Cassidy. Hoppy himself, with four Rocking R riders, approached from the northwest. And while the 3 G riders waited, Clarry Jacks slipped away in the darkness after a muttered word to Dud and rode away toward the southeast.

  Clarry Jacks had the instinct of an animal for changes in the weather, only his instinct was for changes in the attitude of a locality. He was a man who knew when a game was played out, and he was shrewd enough to see that, whether Hopalong was killed or not, this country was going to be unhealthy for a long time to come.

  He was a man utterly without loyalty or scruple. Dud Leeman he accepted because of his usefulness and sheer brutal courage. Jacks wanted one thing now. At first he had wanted the Rocking R, too. Now he wanted only the gold, and he wanted it alone.

  It was natural that he thought less of Cassidy at that moment than of Pony Harper.

  Halting once, he glanced back over his trail, his cold eyes watching the horizon he had purposely crossed. No stars were blotted out by any following rider. He turned then and continued on his way. It no longer concerned him that Gore was making an attempt to waylay Cassidy. He hoped they would be successful, but to his cold, utterly egotistical nature the result was of little importance to him. The plan to dispose of the gold would have to be junked now. He would go to the hideout, remove whatever was of value there, and then go on to the mine at Star City and pick up the gold.

  Returning, he would visit Corn Patch and remove Harris, then go to town again to get Pony Harper. He wanted no vengeful enemies left behind.

  Later, if the war was successful and left the Gores in control, he might drift back into the country, but he had no idea that he wanted to take the chances offered by indiscriminate killing.

  Riding fresh horses borrowed from the remudas left by the 3 G, Hopalong Cassidy led his men into a rocky defile. Overhead the stars were bright in the narrow alley of sky they could see. Before and behind was darkness, and there was no sound but the click of hoofs on rock, the creak of saddle leather, and the occasional blowing of a horse.

  Long experienced in range-land warfare, Hopalong was too shrewd to ride straight into Poker Gap. He was circling through Rocky Canyon, planning to cross a saddle into the Gap so any watchers at the openings would be unlikely to see them. An hour later he made his own camp.

  Frenchy scouted ahead, then returned. He was worried. "Hoppy, there's two camps.

  We can look right down on 'em. The one in the Gap is right out in the middle by the spring. It's a fair-sized fire but that same hombre has another fire hid in the rocks, back maybe thirty feet from it."

  They crawled up to the edge of the steep slope and looked down. It was as Frenchy had said. Hopalong stared, then nodded. "Plain as print, Frenchy. Look at the reflection from that small fire. Reflects off rocks around it. I'll bet nobody could see tha
t fire unless they were above it like we are. That hombre has built him a regular campfire for folks to see, but he don't want himself spotlighted over any fire. He's got him a concealed fire back in the rocks where he can cook a meal without being' seen.

  Same time, he can watch the bigger fire."

  "Well, I'll be hanged!" Ruyters nodded. "Sure as rain, that's it. Wonder who he is?"

  "Let's have a look at the other fire."

  This was a small fire, by which they could see the shadows of a number of men. "There they are, sure as shootin'!" Milligan whispered. "There's nine, ten men down there!"

  Hopalong studied the situation. They could all see that these men had chosen a position carefully concealed, and it was probable that lone camper by the spring did not know of their existence, nor they of his, although the last was less probable. To start a fight in this darkness would mean danger for friends as well as enemies, and he had no intention of forcing a battle now if he could help it.

  Sliding back off the ridge, he hunkered down behind a boulder out of sight and rolled a smoke. "Now down there is a passel of trouble," he said, "and the question is, how to handle it without too many of us gettin' shot up."

  Shorty Montana snorted. "Just ride in on 'em, shootin' with both hands. They'd be so plumb surprised they'd never get a shot off."

  "Maybe," Hopalong admitted, "but I've got another idea. Isn't much as ideas come, but perhaps she'll do."

  Quietly he explained, and as he explained, the men began to chuckle. Battle-loving as the four were, and ready enough to run every last doubter of the Rocking R out of the country, they also had a rough sense of humor and the zest for practical jokes no cowhand ever outgrows. That the joke, if such it could be called, would be coupled with disaster to the enemy was all the better.

  "First off," Hopalong asked, "who's the best Indian in the crowd? Two of 'em, in fact."

  "Me," Newton said promptly. "I was raised up with Utes. I could steal the hide off a longhorn calf without the cow even knowin' I was near."

  "Aw!" Tex interrupted. "Don't you believe him, Hoppy. He couldn't find a barn in the daytime even if he had a rope tied to it. Besides, he's too young. He's just outgrown his rattle!"

  "Huh!" Kid Newton grunted. "Leastways I outgrew mine. Yours is in your head!"

  "All right, you can both go. I want you to slip down and get those fresh horses out of there. Don't bother with the beat-up ones. You can tell 'em easy enough because if they aren't still wet, the hair on 'em will be dried an' stiff."

  "And don't get your head kicked off," Shorty advised, flattening his shoulders back against a boulder. "Although why either of you needs a head beats me."

  Muttering their replies, the two slipped off. Frenchy Ruyters rolled over and nodded after them. "Fact is, the Kid's pretty slick," he said. "Tex, he does all right, but he cain't hold a candle to that Kid."

  He watched Hopalong getting to his feet. "Where are you aimin' to go, Hoppy?"

  "Scoutin'. I figure I'd like to know who that hombre is down there by himself. You two stick here and get set to cover those boys if they need it. When I come back we'll take up the rest of the action."

  The steep hillside before Cassidy was covered with gravel dotted with bunch grass and occasional greasewood. A few scattered juniper added to the growth and offered some vague shelter as he started down. Nevertheless, because of the danger of sound caused by rattling gravel, it was a painstaking task to work one's way across that steep slope in darkness.

  Already the second of the two fires was almost out, but the former had been replenished in the last few minutes. Only a few coals shone where the stranger had camped. Hopalong Cassidy circled around and came up on the fires warily. He was within a dozen yards of them when he heard a soft whisper of sound. Tensely he waited, listening. Then he heard it again! The sound of rough clothing moving through grass or brush! Someone else was crawling not a dozen feet away, and in the same direction! Still listening, Hopalong heard another movement on his left and realized that several men were crawling alongside him, all of them bound for the campfire up ahead. But had they seen the smaller fire? He doubted it, doubted that it could be seen from anywhere but overhead.

  Hopalong edged himself nearer the crawling man, caught his head outlined momentarily against the starlit sky, and slammed down with his six-shooter. With a grunt the man subsided where he lay.

  Silence.

  Suddenly a wild yell rent the night, and on the signal the men arose and charged the fire. They charged, then slid to a stop, looking foolishly about. Where the sleeping man had seemed to be lying was only a double row of stones covered with a blanket.

  -J

  "Gone!" Hankins swore. "That durned Cassidy's outsmarted us!"

  Hopalong grinned in the darkness. Straining his eyes and shifting his head from right to left because of the boulders, he soon saw and was able to identify several of the men: Con Gore, Dud Leeman, Drennan, Hankins, Rawhide!

  "Hey! Where's Troy?" Hankins yelled. "What happened to him?"

  "He was with us a while back. "What's he doin'? Hidin' out?"

  Hopalong slid hastily back into the darkness and moved for the slope. He still did not know who the stranger was, but the man must have been close by. There had been no chance for him to have escaped without being seen or heard by Hopalong himself.

  A startled yell warned him that Troy had been found. And he could see the darker blotch where the men had gathered. Then he moved on up the hill and returned to his own men. He was surprised to find Kid Newton and Tex Milligan arriving, too. Both were stifling laughter.

  "Got all their horses!" Tex whispered. "They are sure enough afoot now."

  "You know," Hopalong said suddenly, "I didn't see Jacks, but his sidekick Leeman was there."

  "Then it must have been Jacks!" Newton leaned forward. "We found one horse missin'.

  His picket rope had been left lyin' on the ground, but he was gone. I felt in the ground for tracks and found where a man in fairly new high-heeled boots had mounted that horse!"

  "Where would he be goin'?" Ruyters asked.

  Hopalong knew that Kid Newton was thinking the same thing he was: that Clarry might have gone to meet Lenny Ron son. Then another thought came to him. Suppose he had gone to the hideout? It was not too far from here, and if he knew of it he might go there. Perhaps he was the leader!

  The man who had killed Thacker had been a fast hand with a gun, and Clarry was that.

  Instantly, Hoppy knew what he had to do.

  "We've set 'em afoot, boys," Hopalong said suddenly, "and it's a good thirty miles to the 3 G. Unless they gamble and take a roundabout route, they won't get there until tomorrow night sometime. You might's well head for home."

  "What about you?" Ruyters asked.

  "Why, I've got a little job to do," Cassidy said, "down the trail a ways. You boys head for home. I'll be along tomorrow or the next day." He yawned. "Come to think of it, we all need sleep. Daybreak will be soon enough to move."

  But at daybreak they did not move, for they were scarcely on their feet when they heard a wild yell from the valley and then a storm of curses. Saddling up, Hopalong grinned at Frenchy. "Now what do you suppose those rannies are so all-fired upset about?"

  Kid Newton was grinning as he slouched toward them. He wore his left-hand gun with the butt back, but the right-hand one with the butt to the fore. Both guns ready for a left-hand draw. "Might as well have some coffee, Hoppy," he said. "I sort of figure on stickin' around long enough to see those hombres on the hike."

  "Don't get too close," Milligan warned, "or they'll have that bronc of yours and you'll be walkin'! They've still got guns."

  Shorty Montana had walked to the edge of the bin and was standing in plain sight, looking down upon them. "Hey!" he bellowed suddenly. "Hey, you fellers!"

  As one man, they wheeled and stared upward at him. "Get movin'!" he yelled. "It's not more than thirty miles or so! If you're lucky, you make it tonight. That is-if your feet
hold out!"

  Con Gore swore viciously and grabbed his rifle. Instantly Shorty dropped to his knees, then rolled back away from the rim of the canyon. When he got up he was laughing, but he was careful to avoid the edge of the hill, where he could be skylined.

  Saddling up, Hopalong Cassidy started east once more, but now he was riding with a definite purpose, for ahead of him was a gunman the equal, if not the superior, of any he had ever faced.

  Before him the tracks lined out, easily identified as those of the horse who had been picketed where Newton indicated the man had mounted. There was a chance he was mistaken, but all the signs pointed this way, and Hopalong Cassidy was sure he knew where the outlaw was riding.

  And then into the trail came another set of tracks. These were those of an unshod horse, but the rider was no Indian.

  Who was he then? The mysterious camper in the canyon?

  Another rider on a gun trail?

  A friend or an enemy?

  Chapter 10

  A Shootout.

  Recent events had Pony Harper worried. By now there should have been news. However, the few riders who drifted into town reported they had seen neither movement nor shadow on the range of either the 3 G or Rocking R.

  It was uncanny and unreasonable. Knowing the rough-and-ready violence of range war, he found this silence nerve-shattering. By rights plenty of trouble should have been popping, and while one cowhand did admit to hearing gunfire, he had seen nothing.

  A Harper scout, riding around by the 3 G, found a deathlike silence, empty corrals, and no visible Me.

  Having depended upon this range war to rid him of his rivals, Harper was now thinking less of the Ronsons than of one or two others. Ever since Thacker had been found dead and his pockets empty of all papers and money, Harper had been worried. If Thacker had carried anything incriminating, that evidence might now be in the hands of his killer-and Pony Harper knew exactly who that killer was.

  Four hands, he finally learned, had returned to the Rocking R, but Hopalong Cassidy was absent on some mission of his own. What if he had gone again to the hideout? What might he uncover there? Or at the mine near Star City?

 

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