Ride the Dark Trail (1972)
Page 16
By this time the boys at the ranch would be getting restless with Em gone and me taking off like that. Pennywell would know I’d been scared for her, and the boys would come on into town to find out what had happened. Daybreak, at the latest, would see them fogging it down the trail after me - and the trail I left behind they could follow with ease.
One thing was sure. They were headed for someplace they knew. They were riding right into the hills now, not looking around for an opening, but riding toward some place they knew about. And I knew nothing about this country. The last tracks I could see were pointed into the hills, and sure enough, a canyon opened its jaws at me as I rode up. There didn’t seem much chance they’d cut off to right or left, so I rode in and drew up, listening.
Now a canyon carries sound, and I did not want them to hear me. I sat very still, listening. Nothing … just nothing at all. A night bird cried somewhere, but that was all. I searched the gray sky where a few stars appeared for the vague trail that smoke might make, and I studied the canyon walls for a reflected glow from a fire.
Nothing …
It gave me an uneasy feeling. There was a coolness coming out of that canyon, and no smell of smoke. After a bit I walked my horse a dozen yards farther and stopped just short of where the canyon narrowed down. I stepped down from the saddle and with the most careful touch ever I touched the sand. Inch by inch I worked my way across the narrow opening. Forward, then back. There were no tracks in the sand.
Leading my horse I walked back to the mouth and went off to the right-hand shoulder of the canyon. There I peered up, looking for some opening in the dark wall of the trees that would show a trail. Sometimes there is a narrow gap against the sky … but this time there was nothing.
On the left it looked to be the same thing, and then I caught a faint odor of something that wasn’t the damp coolness of green grass, brush, and trees.
Dust…
I kneeled on the ground and felt with my fingers. Grass … wild flowers, and then a narrow trail, and in it my fingers felt out the vague pattern of hoofs.
For a moment there I stood with my hand on the pommel, my head leaning against the saddle. I was tired … almighty tired. This was the first time I’d been out since I’d been shot, and it was no time to be making a long, hard ride through mountains.
Pulling myself up into the saddle I let the roan have his head. “Let’s see where they go,” I said quietly. “Come on, boy, you’ve got to help me.”
He taken off up the trail. I knew he could smell those other horses, and it is horse instinct to be with others of his kind, so I had a hunch I could trust that roan to take me to them once I had him on the right trail. He started along, walking fast. Loosening the grip of the scabbard on my Winchester, I taken the thong off my six-shooter. Somewhere up ahead those men had an old woman of my own family. All right … the kinship was distant, but it was there, and we’d talked together, drunk coffee together, fought enemies side by each.
We topped out on a rise and I made it quick over to the other side, not wanting to leave any target on the ridge. Ahead of me was a meadow, tall grass all silver in the rising moonlight. Silver but for one dark streak where riders had brushed off the dew of night. I trotted my horse, knowing in that damp grass it would make no sound to be heard farther than the creak of my saddle.
Ahead of me was a grove of aspen, big stuff, much larger than a man was usually likely to see. I rode to the edge of the grove and drew up to the white trunks ghostly in the beginning moonlight. We were high up, nothing but spruce and timberline above us.
Something was beginning to nag at my memory, and I couldn’t place it. We’d come a good distance since I picked up the trail near Siwash … I’d make a guess at twenty miles. I was all in and the roan was beginning to lag, but there weren’t too many groves of aspen that grew to this size. Aspen start to decay at the heart when they get too big, although I’ve seen some that didn’t.
Looking up the mountain I could see timberline up there, not more than a thousand feet above me with a thick stand of spruce in between. There was a snaggly old tree up there that looked almighty familiar in a lopsided sort of way. And that was the trouble … everything looked kind of back-side to.
It came to me all of a sudden as I sat there on the roan just letting it soak in.
This was the old Fiddletown Mine country.
The Fiddletown had been a hideout for outlaws almost from discovery. There’d been several mines of the name, I guess, but this one was named by an Arkansas hillbilly who killed a man in a knife fight down near Cherry Creek. He took to the hills to hide out and discovered gold, there wasn’t much gold but the country was mighty pretty, so Fiddletown Jack, as they called him, built himself a cabin and worked his mine, piling up a little gold against the time when it would be safe to come out. From time to time some friends of his holed up with him, and one of them, hunting Fiddletown’s gold cache, was killed by Jack. But Jack was killed by the would-be thief’s partner. After that, even outlaws shied away from the place for six or seven years, but from this moment to that somebody would hide out there for a while. I’d spent three weeks there one time … but that was years back. I hadn’t heard tell of the place since then, and it was a way back yonder in the hills and an unlikely place to go.
I walked the roan on a couple of hundred yards and then drew up and got down. For a moment there my knees buckled and I feared I was about to fall, but I had me a grip on the old apple and I hung on until I got over the dizzy spell and the weakness.
I tied the roan there, leaving him room enough to nibble around on the brush, and then I shucked my Winchester and began to Injun through the aspens and spruce toward the cabins.
There was a bunkhouse yonder, the opening of the tunnel, a root cellar where Fiddletown had stored his moonshine, and there were a couple of old log cabins caved in by the heavy snows. It often got fourteen or fifteen feet deep through here, and deeper in the hollows. This was high country … more than ten thousand feet up.
First off I hunted their horses. I wanted an idea as to how many there were. I wanted that old lady out of there but getting myself killed wasn’t going to help her none.
Three horses and a mule. I found them in a corral beyond the bunkhouse, but I stayed away, looking at them from a distance.
Three horses … was one a pack horse? Yet there had been at least three riders around the draw where they’d grabbed Em. Edging closer, and keeping shy of the corral where the horses might warn them, I worked up under the eaves of the bunkhouse. Making my way along the wall, close under the overhang of the low roof, I reached a window. It was so dirty and cobwebby I had trouble seeing through, but the first thing I saw was Em.
It gave me a lift just to see her. She was sitting up straight and tall. There was an ugly bruise on the side of her face where she must have been hit the time she was grabbed, hours ago, and there was a cut on her lip. She’d been hurt, but the fire was there, and the contempt she felt for them.
It was quiet inside and I could see none of the men I was hunting. I could make no move until I knew where every man-jack of them was. I didn’t dare step into that cabin with Em in the line of fire or I’d just get her killed, and probably me, too. The worst of it was one of them might be outside somewhere on watch. If I started in he could take me from behind. My rifle shifted to my left hand while I checked to make sure my six-gun was there. It was.
Crouching down, I went under the window to look in from the other side. It was so dirty I could just barely make out one man sitting on the far side of the table from Em. He was talking to somebody else who was out of sight, so that accounted for two of them.
Em didn’t seem in any immediate danger, but how could a body tell? I couldn’t hear anything but a mumble of voices, but I couldn’t feature them keeping her around long. Flanner wasn’t fool enough to imagine he could scare the Talon boys into anything, and if he tried to get them to sign the ranch over to save their ma he’d still have them to de
al with after.
Whatever he intended to do, he would do here.
I backed off from the cabin and got back to the stable.
Then I began an inch-by-inch check to see where the other man was. At least to find out if he was outside the house. None of them could be made out from that window.
Nobody was in the old stable, nor in the entrance to the mine tunnel. I worked my way around the place, moving, listening, then moving again.
There was only the one door and one window in the cabin. Squatting down among some rocks, I gave study to the situation. I had to get them out of there. There was no other way to do it - and when they came clear of the door I’d have to be shooting. It was no small thing to tackle three tough, well-armed men, and I was going to give them no more chance than they’d give me. I was sure that all three of them were in the crowd that beat me and left me for dead yonder over the mountains, so I’d get a little of my own back.
They had them a mite of fire going as the night was cold at that altitude. If I could get on the roof …
There was no chance of that. They’d hear me right off and shoot me to pieces before I could nail even one of them. They weren’t pilgrims, who’d come running outside to see who or what was up there. They’d just go to shooting right through the roof … I’d done it myself, a time or two. A forty-five bullet will go through six inches of pine, and that roof was nothing but poles with a thin covering of grass and some dirt.
So I went back to the stable and got me a rope off one of the horse’s rigs. I taken that rope, edged around in the darkness, measured the distance with my eyes, and built me a loop. Then I stepped back and roped that pipe they had for a chimney. I gave her a good yank and it came loose and there was a yell from inside. I stepped back into the deeper shadows, then ran around to the front door.
By the time I got there that cabin was filling up with smoke and those boys came out of there a-running. The first one was a man I’d seen before but never had his name. He was a big-chested man, showing a little belly over his gun belt. He came running outside, gun in hand, ready to drop whatever showed, but I wasted no time. Throwing up my Winchester, cocking as I lifted it, I shot him right in the belly. He heard the click of my hammer coming back and he let go with a shot that exploded before he wanted, my bullet knocking him back a step where the second one nailed him.
The light went out inside the cabin and then another man came out. I fired a quick shot at the vague outline of his figure and missed, and two bullets clipped brush near me. I ran at the cabin, thinkin’ of Em. I beard a bullet thud into the logs just as I reached it, and I jumped inside. The cabin was filled with smoke, but I saw Em struggling against the ropes. I couldn’t really see her but I made out a dim outline that had to be her.
My knife was razor sharp and I cut her loose. “Watch it!” she whispered hoarsely. “Flanner, Duckett, an’ Slim are outside.”
I’d figured on three … and that made four. There might be another around.
“Em,” I whispered, “can you crawl?”
She went to the floor near me and started for the door. They’d be laying for us outside, so I taken up a chair and heaved it out the door, then plunged out and began raking the area with rifle fire to cover Em’s escape.
There were a couple of shots and then a whole lot of silence and I saw Em making for the corral. Nobody fired, so I backed up, trying to see all ways at once. The moon was getting up over the shoulder of the mountain now, so we got back against the corral’s indefinite shadow and crouched there.
“You take care of yourself, Logan,” Em said. “I got the dif’rence now,” and she showed me the big old Dragoon Colt that she must have caught up before leaving the cabin.
The moon was shining over half the clearing now and we could see the body of the man I’d shot lying out there in the open. He wasn’t dead but he was going to wish he was. I’d seen men shot in the gut before and took no pleasure in it. Nothing else moved. I studied the cast of the moonlight and decided we were all right as long as we stayed still. Leaning my Winchester against the poles of the corral, I shucked my six-shooter and waited for something to move out there.
It was almighty still. I could hear the chuckle of the water in the creek some distance off, and once in a while a horse shifted his feet in the corral. I guessed that the fire had gone out or died down because smoke no longer came from the cabin that did duty as a bunkhouse. The door gaped open, a black rectangle that suggested a place a body could hide and stand off a crowd, but I liked the open where a body could move.
You know something? It was beautiful. So still you could hear one aspen leaf caressing another, the moon wide and white shining through the leaves, and just above the dark, somber spruce, bunched closely together, tall and still like a crowd of black-robed monks standing in prayer.
And the old buildings, the fallen-in cabins, the log bunkhouse, the black hole of the mine tunnel. A bird made a noise, inquiring of the night. There was nothing else but an occasional rustling from the aspen whispering together like a bunch of schoolgirls. And me there with a gun in my hand, and Em by my side.
A voice spoke, a low voice, not over ten yards off. It was a voice I’d heard only once that I could recall, but I knew it for Johannes Duckett
“Logan Sackett?”
I wasn’t about to answer, nor to shoot until I heard him out. I had his position spotted the instant he spoke, but I learned long since not to shoot too soon or without reason. So I waited.
“This is Johannes Duckett. I am pulling out, I have had enough of this. I never wanted to shoot at Emily Talon, and I will not. This is Jake Flanner’s fight.”
There was a pause, during which I waited, listening to see if it was a cover for movement. Then he said, “I want to move now, and I don’t want to get shot when I do.”
I said nothing, but then he commenced to move, and I could hear him drawing back. The sounds slowly drifted away farther off down the hill, and then there was silence.
Two men left … I got up slowly, standing by the corner post of the corral, which was taller than me.
Suddenly a match flared in the cabin, a lamp was lit. I heard the tiny click of the chimney as it was fitted to the lamp again. A man moved within the cabin and we heard the thump of a crutch, but then a chair was drawn back and we heard the creak as a heavy man sat down.
“Em,” I whispered, “he’s gotten into the cabin.”
“You don’t do nothin’ foolish, boy.”
“There’s another one, Em. I think he’s out around here somewhere.”
“You do what you have to, son. I’ll watch that other one.”
“Jake Flanner is a talker, Em. I think he wants to talk to me. I don’t believe he’ll try killing me until he’s had his say.”
“All right.”
I turned and walked across the open ground toward the bunkhouse. My six-shooter was in my hand, but as I stepped inside I dropped it into the holster. I had listened for sound outside, but heard nothing.
Jake Flanner had gotten to his feet and was leaning on his crutches, favoring one side as he always seemed to do. There was a pistol showing in its holster, and I knew he carried another one inside his coat. He moved his arm, letting me glimpse the butt of that hideout gun.
Why?
Every sense alert, I waited He was the talker, not me. I was tired, dead tired. As I stood there, feet apart, hands hanging, I felt all sickish and weak. If I didn’t get better soon I’d never get to California.
Suddenly Jake’s voice rang out of the stillness. “You’ve given me a lot of trouble, Sackett. I wish you had come to work for me that first day.”
“I never work for no man. Not with a gun.”
“But why against me? I did nothing to you.”
“I didn’t like the way your boys set after that girl.”
“Her? Really? But she’s nobody, Sackett. She’s just a broken-down nester’s daughter.”
“Everybody is somebody to me. Maybe she don�
��t cut no ice where you figure, Flanner, but she’s got the right to choose her man when she’s ready, not to be taken like that.”
He laughed, his eyes glinting, “I heard you were a hard man, Sackett, and so you’ve proved to be. I would never have suspected you of chivalry.”
“I don’t know what that means, Flanner. I only know she was a poor kid, all wet from the rain and scared from runnin’, and that Spivey - “
“But that’s over, Sackett. Spivey is dead. Why did you take up for Em Talon?”
“Emily Talon is a Sackett. I don’t need no more reason than that.”
He shifted his weight, leaning kind of heavy to one side, and that nagged at me. I don’t know why except that I’m a suspicious man.
“Too bad, Sackett. We’d have made a team. You, Duckett, and me.”
“Duckett is gone.”
He was shocked. He stared at me. “What do you mean? You’ve killed him? But I heard no shot!”
“He just pulled out. He had enough, Flanner. He said he never did believe in going after Em Talon. He’s gone. You’re alone, Flanner.”
He smiled then. “Oh? Well, if that’s the way the cards fall.” He moved up a little and turned a shade to one side. “Mind if I sit down, Sackett? These crutches - “
Jake Flanner hitched himself forward a little. Suddenly one of the crutches swung up and I shot him.
It was as fast and clean a draw as I ever made, but as that crutch swung up as though he were going to lay it on the table, I shot him right in the belly. My second shot hit the hand and wrist that held the crutch and he fell back against the chair, caught at it, and they fell together.
“You’d shoot a crip - ?” His voice faded, but not the glow in his eyes. His crutches had fallen but his right hand was going toward the hideout gun.
There was a sudden boom from outside that could only be the Dragoon. “Everything’s all right out here, Logan,” Em said. “I taken this one out.”
I just stood there gun in hand, watching him take hold of the butt of his hideout gun.