Novel 1966 - Kid Rodelo (v5.0)
Page 7
Now for the first time he realized how tired he was, but he did not dare to sleep. He could trust no one of them, perhaps not even Nora. He had not figured her out at all, but then she could know nothing about him either.
He tried to remember all he knew about this country, and could recall only a little, most of it quite general. These natural tanks were the only water he knew of south of Tinajas Altas on which a man could rely, and even they might on occasion be empty or down to mere dregs. But there must have been rain not very long ago, for the tanks were well filled and the water was sweet. West of Pinacate was an area to be avoided. He had never penetrated far in that direction and it might be passable, but there were hundreds of small cones there, and rough, lava flows—desperately bad country to cross. To the east it was nearly as bad, but a ghost of a trail went that way and just at the base of the two highest peaks there were some tanks. He had never seen them, but a Yuma Indian had told him of them. This Indian had learned of them from the Sand Papagos, who had once lived in the Pinacate country.
Whether there was water or not, it would be a safer route, although somewhat longer. There were other tanks at the southern tip of Pinacate, but none of them or those to the east were reliable.
Why not, he asked himself, bring it to a showdown now? Yet the moment he thought of it he knew he dared do nothing of the kind. In the first place, he was out-numbered; in the second, he hoped to bring it off without a shooting if he could manage it. In a way, he was waiting, just as the Indians were, for them to play out. At the same time he knew he was giving them every break he could…was it because of Nora? Or some forgotten remnant of humanitarian impulse within him?
He could slip away and hide out in the desert. After all, one of the remaining canteens was his own. But without him there was little chance they would survive. A chance, yes, but a very small one.
The wind was cold. Rodelo looked up at the stars. The desert or mountain man was forever lifting his eyes to the peaks or to the stars; it was no wonder that men of the wilderness knew so much about the flight of birds and the habits of animals. In cities a man’s eyes were on the ground, or rarely above eye level.
He went back toward the fire, but stood back from it, beyond the edge of the light. He wanted to offer no target if one of the Indians decided now was the time.
“We’ve got to mount guard,” Badger said.
Harbin got up. “I’ll take first watch.” He turned to Nora. “Come on, let’s go.”
“Why me?” Nora’s surprise was obvious.
“You can keep me comp’ny. Else I’m likely to fall asleep.”
Tom Badger chuckled, but made no comment. Joe turned on him. “What’s so funny about that?”
“Nothin’. I was just wonderin’ who was going to keep Gopher and me awake…and Danny.”
“Maybe I should share the watch with each of you,” Nora suggested with amusement.
“We could roll the dice to see who takes which watch. Low roll to take the first watch.”
“That ain’t necessary,” Joe said.
“Let’s have the dice, Dan,” Badger said. “I think that’s a fair idea.”
He shook the dice and rolled them out on a flat rock. A five and a four.
Gopher rolled snake eyes, a two, and Rodelo followed with a six. Joe took the dice, threw them irritably…a pair of fives.
“That gives you the dawn watch, Joe,” Badger said. He started to pick up the dice, but Nora reached over and took them from him. “You’re forgetting me.”
“You don’t have to stand a watch,” Harbin said.
“I agree with Joe,” Rodelo said quietly. “You will need your rest, Nora.”
“So will all of you. After all, I am in this too, I’m riding a horse, I’m drinking water, and I will do my share.” She rolled the dice…a four.
“That gives me second watch, I think,” she said.
Rodelo took up his blanket. “Whoever is on watch,” he said, “keep an eye on the horses. If we lose them. we’ve had it.”
Gopher, first on watch, went to a rock near the horses, a position from which he could look over the camp without being approached from behind. Rodelo found a place in the lee of a rock that could shelter him from the cold wind blowing down the arroyo.
But there was more to it than that. Scattered on the ground were the smaller twigs broken from the firewood they had gathered, and it was virtually impossible for anyone to approach without a stick cracking. Wrapped in his blanket, Rodelo took a last look at the fire, at the positions of the others, and then went to sleep.
Chapter 8
*
RODELO WAS AWAKENED by Nora’s careful, almost noiseless movements when she went to relieve Gopher.
“It’s only me, Gopher,” she said. “It’s my turn to take the watch.”
“You don’t have to, ma’am. I can stick it out.”
“You get some sleep while you can. I think tomorrow will be a rough day.”
“I’d like to do it, ma’am. It would be a real pleasure for a lady like yourself.”
“No…you get some rest. And Gopher, drink a lot of water. That’s what Dan has been advising me to do.”
Gopher was standing up, and Rodelo could see him. He heard his voice, very low. “I like him, ma’am—that Rodelo, I mean. I think he’s square. I guess…I guess I never met many who were really on the level. Not like him.”
“He was in prison.”
“But he wasn’t guilty, ma’am!” Gopher said quickly. “Everybody knew that. He just got himself roped into the deal when Joe Harbin grabbed that gold. Folks thought he’d connived with Joe, but that ain’t so, and many’s the time in prison I heard Joe say as much. He figured it was a good joke on Rodelo.”
Gopher was silent for a moment, then he added, “Joe could have cleared Rodelo, but he didn’t. You see, the way I heard it, after Joe stood up that payroll he made a clean getaway, then ran into Rodelo on the trail and they rode on together, the way folks do when they meet up like that. Only it seems Rodelo knew about that payroll and they figured him to be in on it.”
“You’d better get some rest, Gopher,” Nora said. “Tomorrow is another long hot day.”
Dan Rodelo lay quiet. Well, Gopher had told her, and from Gopher she would believe it, for Gopher had nothing to gain by lying. Suddenly, he was glad she knew, even though she did not, yet, know all of it. Nobody knew it all but himself, not even the people back at the mine who had been willing enough to buy the idea that he was a thief.
He lay there, half awake, half asleep, for some time, and finally eased from under the blankets and belted on his gun again. He went at once to the tank and drank, deep and long. Out in the night a coyote sounded, and he listened, but heard no echo. The Indians said that was the way to tell…that a man imitating a coyote would also make an echo, but there was something in the timbre of a coyote’s howl that did not echo. Rodelo had never decided whether this was true or not, but it seemed to be, the few times he had put it to the test.
He walked out to where Nora was on guard. She looked around quickly, her gun muzzle lifting. He grinned in the darkness. No nonsense about her—she was ready for trouble.
“It’s me,” he said quietly.
“My time isn’t up yet.”
“Do you object to some extra rest? I was awake, and I might as well be awake out here as back there.”
He seated himself near her. The night was still. Out upon the desert nothing moved. The stars held still in the sky; the black bulk of Pinacate loomed off to the south.
“I didn’t expect the desert to be like this,” she said. “So much growing, and all.”
“The plants have learned how to survive, each in its own way. Some of them store water against the long drouth, and some seeds will only grow when a certain amount of water has fallen. Most desert plants hold back their leaves or blossoms until the right amount of rain comes, then they blossom quickly and get it over with.”
Rodelo listened for a mome
nt, then he said, “Did you ever look over a desert from high up on a mountain? The greasewood looks as if it had been planted, it’s so evenly spaced. Well, it’s spaced like that because it needs to draw water from the area around it.”
They sat quietly for a time, and then he spoke again. “I don’t get it. What are you doing here? I mean, what have you got to gain?”
“What have I to lose?”
“Your life means nothing to you?”
“Of course it does.” She looked around at him. “It might be that I want that gold, too. Or part of it.”
“You’d be wasting your time. You’ll never see a single coin of it.”
“Joe Harbin may feel otherwise.”
He was silent while again he assayed the darkness. “He won’t,” he said then. “Joe isn’t the kind to let one bit of that gold slip through his fingers if he can help it. If you’re counting on that, you better forget it.”
“I can handle Joe.”
“Maybe you can, at that.” There was an edge of sarcasm in his tone. “Jake Andrews was no Sunday school teacher, either.”
“What’s that to you?”
“Nothing…nothing at all.”
“Jake was all right. He was a good enough man in his way, but he listened to Clint. Jake heard about the gold, heard of it from Joe Harbin’s woman, because one night when Joe was drunk he did some bragging. Clint kept after him until Jake agreed to go and have a look for that gold.”
“What about you and Jake?”
She turned her eyes on him, but in the darkness he could not see their expression. “What about us?” she said.
“I mean…you don’t seem his sort of girl.”
“Any sort of girl was Jake’s sort. He pulled me out of a wrecked train up in Wyoming. I was on fire—my clothes, I mean. He put the fire out, and helped me get away from the Indians who wrecked the train…if they were Indians.”
“What do you mean?”
“I always thought Jake was in that himself. Only when he found me he pulled out, very fast. But he treated me all right. Jake was a hard man, and something of a brute, but he had a queer streak in him. He talked roughly to me, as he did to everyone, but he was oddly gentle too. He wanted to marry me.”
“He was a rancher, wasn’t he?”
“Indians drove off his herd and burned him out. He had some idea of going into Mexico and starting again.”
“So now you’re here.” He started out over the desert, keeping his ears attuned to night sounds. Their voices were low, barely above a whisper. “Right in the middle of hell.”
The wind was cold, and unconsciously they had drawn closer together. Dan looked toward the camp. All lay still, sleeping. At the fire only a few embers glowed among the ashes. His eyes searched the darkness for movement, for any shape that did not belong there.
He knew the Yaquis were close, knew they were skilled man-hunters, and he knew what the fifty dollars a head would mean to them. And there was the added attraction of the girl, of Nora. Of course, they would not bring her back. Nobody knew about her, and it was unlikely that questions would be asked.
As for himself, he wasn’t wanted anywhere, but Hat wanted his boots, which would be reason enough. And, of course, they wanted to make a clean sweep.
“If you’re the last one alive,” he said, “and the Indians take you, you might talk them into taking you to Sam Burrows. He’d give them a hundred dollars for you. Tell them that—it might save your life.”
“And otherwise?”
“There are some springs on Adair Bay, and there’s to be a boat there to pick up a man named Isacher. He’s dead, so don’t worry about him. If not that boat, there are fishing boats along from time to time.”
“And what if we all come through? Or if it is just you and Joe Harbin?”
He looked at her thoughtfully in the darkness. “Then I suppose you will have to choose, Joe Harbin or me.”
He turned suddenly and took her by the shoulders, and for a moment he held her, looking into her face. Then he bent his head and kissed her, lightly, on the lips. “There…when the times comes, that may help.”
*
AT NO GREAT distance, at a place where the basalt had faulted, Hat lay in a niche in the rock. It was a place where he was sheltered from the cold wind, and high enough above the sand so that he had a good view of the camp with its red, winking eye marking the fire. He could distinguish occasional movement near the horses, or about the camp.
They were standing watch, of course. He had expected that. In fact, he had expected about everything that had happened thus far. There was not much a running man could do when he got into the Pinacate country. The only difference was that someone here knew about the water holes.
He knew now who it was. It was simply a matter of reading the sign right, seeing who scouted in the right directions. It was the man with the new boots…Rodelo.
They were carrying something they could not have had when they left the prison, and it was too heavy to be supplies. He had seen the tracks of the pack horse that carried it, and he had seen where it rested at night.
Hat had his own plans, but they were not new. He had used them many times before, and they had been successful. He had never attacked until they reached the dunes or the beach.
Here, among the broken lava flows around Pinacate, there were too many sheltered places. They could defend themselves too well, and usually they were still in shape to put up a stiff fight. He could wait until the dunes and drift sand broke their spirit. None of them carried much water, and that was his first target.
His plan was simplicity itself. Get them out in the dunes. They would have had little to eat or drink, and if their horses had lived this far they had reached their limit. There was shelter in the dunes for him and for his warriors, and they could move easily. The escaped prisoners would be trying for the coast, and he would edge them back from it, make them struggle among the dunes until the last of their water and the last of their strength was exhausted. After that, it would be easy enough.
Usually they died among the dunes, but occasionally one or two would reach the shore. Then he would push them toward one of the two or three poisoned springs nearby, keeping them away from those where fresh if slightly brackish water might be found. Several of the escaped prisoners in the past had been dead before he shot them…the bullet hole was evidence of his capture.
Hat was curious, as all Indians were inclined to be. Now he was wondering if the man with the new boots knew about the other water holes. Which side of the Pinacate would he take? He had an idea it would be the eastern side, away from the volcanic vents and the lava of the western slope.
Hat now had eleven warriors with him, all eager for the hunt. Four were Yaquis, one an outlaw Pima, and the others of the Yuma tribe. All but one had ridden with him before, although at different times.
With such a number he could herd the escaped prisoners like sheep, firing a bullet when necessary to turn them back, edging them away from the easiest routes, winning his final victory and the gold merely for a long ride into the desert. It amused Hat to consider that. Yet he had a moment of doubt…There was that one with the new boots…he was a cunning traveler, like a prairie wolf. Would he find another way?
But eventually he must turn to the dunes. Of course, if he held to the line of mountains he could reach a point where the ride to the water would be shorter. If he tried that, they must head him off.
Hat was first of all a hunter, and as such, he was interested in what his prey might attempt. He was not worried. After all, they were amateurs in the Pinacate country; he was the professional. One last reservation he had…the Pinacate itself might take a hand in the game.
The old gods lurked among the mountains, this he knew, and the Pinacate was a place of the gods, as all such solitary places are apt to be. The Pinacate had moods and whims—sudden storms, strange fogs moving up from the Gulf, white frosts that came suddenly, even in summer. Such frosts appeared on the rocks in
the morning and vanished with the first sun.
Directly in the path of the way they must go lay a forest of cholla. By appearing on the slopes to the east or west, he would herd his quarry into the cholla. Possibly they might pass through without injury, but such a thing rarely happened. There were paths that led into the cholla, some of which went nowhere, and he had made a few of these himself. On his various forays into the desert he would take the time to follow these little trails, in and out. Each was a cul-de-sac, a trap difficult to escape from without injury.
He had found these blind trails successful in putting his enemies afoot. A horse badly stabbed by the thorns of the cholla was a crippled horse. Hat had no such feeling for horses as was found among the Plains Indians, and also among some of his own tribe. To Hat the horse was something to ride, and when a horse died or was crippled, he got another one.
Finally Hat went to sleep. He would awaken with the first light, and that would be soon enough. It was up to him to choose the place where they would die, and in his own mind he had already made a selection.
Out on the lava, a coyote howled. A nighthawk swooped and darted in the night, and out on the broken basaltic fragments a tiny rock fell, rolled down a slope, and fell again.
The stars, like far-off campfires, held their stillness in the sky.
Tom Badger came out from the camp and paused beside Rodelo. “Quiet?”
“Yeah.”
“Dan, you keep shy of Harbin. What’s between you is your own business, and you settle it when you can, but now we’re needin’ every gun.”
“I don’t want to fight.”
“You know, I’m wonderin’ about you, Rodelo. Why are you here—what are you after?”
Rodelo ignored the question. He nodded his head toward the mountains. “You’re an Indian, Tom…or part Indian. What’s he waiting for?”
“The right time, the right place. He knows where we have to go, he knows how we have to get there.”