The Dawn of Fury

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The Dawn of Fury Page 24

by Compton, Ralph


  “I’ll say one thing for Stumberg. The varmint’s got more brass than a whorehouse bed. He as good as told us we’re goin’ to be bushwhacked durin’ that race. How can he be so sure we won’t just ride and say to hell with it?”

  “He has an edge, an ace in the hole,” Silver said. “Like you said, he’s as good as told us we’ll likely be caught in a crossfire. He figures between that and kicking us off the Queen of Diamonds, we’ll be mad as hell and of a mind to get even.”

  “He’s right about that part of it,” said Nathan, “but I have a stronger reason. My pard will be ridin’ Barnabas McQueen’s Diablo, and McQueen thinks the black can walk away from all the others. Especially those thoroughbreds of Stumbergs. I think so too.”

  “If that’s true,” Silver said, “you’d have been wise to figure some way of keeping your friend out of that race.”

  “To this particular friend,” said Nathan, “riding McQueen’s Diablo next Saturday is worth the risk. We’re talking about a south Texas rider who has more feeling for horses than anybody I’ve ever known.”

  “So that’s part of your reason for playing out your string,” Silver said. “To try and save your friend from being shot out of the saddle.”

  “A big part of it,” Nathan replied.

  “I suppose yours is a more noble cause than mine,” said Silver, “but I am committed, and when I’ve given my word, I’ll stick till hell freezes.”

  “I admire you for that,” Nathan said. “At the finish, after we shoot our way past the ambush, we’ll be finished with Stumberg. I have the promise of a bunk at McQueen’s place out on Bayou Road. I can’t see that he’ll be in any more danger with both of us than he’ll risk with just me.”

  “I’ll ride with you,” Silver replied. “I’ll need a place to hole up until Sunday, when the Queen of Diamonds returns from St. Louis. I have a hole card to play, and when the dust settles, I doubt McQueen will be bothered for having taken us in. Once we’ve drawn fire from those bushwhackers, we can raise some hell of our own.”

  “We have to face the possibility that one or both of us won’t come out of this alive,” said Nathan. “Those varmints will be shootin’ to kill this time. Damn it, this could be the end of the trail.”

  “I’ve considered that,” Silver said. “I don’t know you any better than you know me, but I feel like we’ve been over the mountain together. If I make it and you don’t, is there anything I can do for you, besides evening the score?”

  “All my kin are dead,” said Nathan, “so I reckon that’ll be enough. I’d say you’re a bueno hombre, Silver. If I live and you cash in, I’ll gun down those bushwhackers if I have to follow them to hell. Besides that, is there anything else I can do?”

  “Just one thing,” Silver said. “If I live, I’m bound to silence, but if I die, all bets are off. Inside my right boot there’s a slit in the leather. Behind the lining you’ll find written instructions that must be followed to the letter. There is a telegram that must be sent. The message will be just two words: ‘Twenty-one.’ It is not be be signed. After that, you follow the instructions. That’s all I’m permitted to tell you. If you’d just done the sensible thing and got the hell out of here, I’d not be revealing this much.”

  Nathan laughed. “If I escape the ambush, you’re givin’ Stumberg’s bunch another chance at me.”

  “Wrong,” Silver said. “If I don’t make it, I’m placing in your hands the power to destroy French Stumberg. But unless I’m shot all to hell, you or nobody else is going to deny me that privilege.”

  “There is one thing you can do,” said Nathan. “If we both live through this, I’d like to know why you’re so willing to risk your neck. God, I knew fire-breathing Rebs who wouldn’t have taken the risks you’re taking.”

  “Let’s just say that something lit a fire under me,” Silver said. “If you side me through this and we both live to talk about it, I reckon you’ll have earned the right to know where I’m coming from.”

  This talk with Silver forced Nathan to question his own motives. While he rode a perilous vengeance trail, committed to gun down seven killers, it had been his own choice. So had been his decision to gain the confidence of French Stumberg as a means of getting to Dillard and Snider, a pair of the killers he sought. Now it appeared that Snider—and possibly Dillard—had fled New Orleans. Nathan’s vengeance trail had taken a new turn and he now knew enough about Stumberg’s unsavory activities to consider just riding on, but he could not. He had committed himself to a cause, an unlikely alliance with the enigmatic Byron Silver that could destroy them both. But, he had to admit, his motivation went beyond his word to Silver, and Nathan Stone had to face a truth he had been avoiding. Eulie Prater had become a part of his life, and with her determination to ride Diablo into what promised to become a deadly ambush, he couldn’t forsake her. The vengeance trail would have to wait until he either saved Eulie’s life or until they both died in the same hail of bushwhacker lead. Damn it, he would keep his word to Silver and save Eulie if he could, but when the smoke cleared—if he were alive—he would again ride the vengeance trail, and all the devils from hell wouldn’t stop him ...

  The rain began on December twenty-third and continued through Christmas Day. It was a tiresome, dreary time with little to do but wait. One morning, Nathan kicked off his blankets and sat up in his bunk.

  Silver grinned at him. “Merry Christmas,” said the Texan.

  “Yeah,” Nathan grunted. “The same to you.”

  “I reckon we won’t be swappin’ gifts,” said Silver with a straight face.

  “On, we can do it in spirit,” Nathan replied sourly. “I won’t swear at you if you’ll dig a hole and drop your damned good humor into it. I reckon there’s nothin’ that gets on a man’s nerves more than trying to be mad as hell and havin’ some grinnin’ varmint trying to be funny.”

  Gretna. December 29, 1866.

  Three days of sun had done wonders for the track, and by eleven o’clock, a substantial crowd had gathered in anticipation of the race. A dozen fires crackled under as many coffeepots and a rich aroma filled the air. Most of the horse owners and their riders were there, Bess McQueen and Eulie in a buckboard and McQueen on his horse. McQueen had spoken to a dozen men who shared his hatred of French Stumberg, and these staunch friends had arrived with Winchesters in their saddle boots. If Nathan Stone’s suspicions were well founded, McQueen was determined that none of Stumberg’s killers was going to escape.

  “Here they come!” somebody shouted.

  Nathan Stone and Byron Silver rode from the south, each of them leading one of Stumberg’s thoroughbreds. Drew Shanklin waited, accompanied by Red and Jake Prinz. Nathan and Silver reined up, passing the lead ropes of the horses to Shanklin. Then, without a word to the trio, Nathan and Silver rode back beyond the starting line, where McQueen stood beside his horse and Bess and Eulie waited in the buckboard. Nathan performed the introductions, and Silver swept off his hat. Cotton Blossom regarded Silver with undisguised suspicion.

  “When this is all over,” Nathan said quietly, “I’m bringing Silver with me. He needs a place to hole up for a night or so.”

  “Right,” said McQueen.

  “Lots of hombres driftin’ around with Winchesters,” Nathan said. “Do you know anything about that?”

  “Not a thing,” McQueen said innocently.

  As the start of the race drew near, the crowd became restless. Few wished to remain at the starting line, and began arranging themselves at intervals along the track. While they wanted to see the finish, they didn’t want to risk missing what might happen prior to it. The finish line was marked with a wide red ribbon stretched across the track, and on either side of it stood one of the judges. Each horse was numbered according to its position at the starting line. Stumberg’s horses were numbers two and twelve, while Diablo had drawn fourteen. That put Eulie on the outside, nearest the river, and Nathan took some comfort in that, for he would be riding nearest her. Unless he an
d Silver had figured everything totally wrong, they would be the first to draw fire, allowing them to go after the bushwhackers before Eulie and the other riders were in danger. It all depended on who took the lead in the race, and Nathan knew Eulie Prater would never hold back, if it meant her life ...

  There was a shot signaling the start of the race and the horses were off and running. A big roan took an early lead, with Diablo running a close second. The rest of the horses were bunched. Eulie leaned forward and seemed to speak to the horse, and Diablo responded. Clearly, unless something went wrong, he would soon take the lead. Nathan rode well to the rear, Winchester ready. Uncertain as to what was expected of him, Cotton Blossom trailed behind. Then without warning, several of the bunched horses tried to break free. Shouldering into others, they sparked a neighing, biting ruckus. It allowed Stumberg’s bay and chestnut to gallop ahead. They seemed to be getting into the spirit of the race, for they surged into the final stretch running third and fourth. Nathan tensed. If there were going to be trouble, now was the time.

  Suddenly there were two rapid shots, the second sounding like an echo of the first. Lead burned across Nathan’s right arm, just above the elbow. As rapidly as he could jack in the shells, he fired three times into a thicket, just below a rising puff of smoke. There were more shots, but from different positions. Firing while mounted posed some difficulty, and Nathan rolled out of the saddle. He hit the ground running, zigzagging toward the river with Cotton Blossom right behind him, but there were no more shots. Nathan moved cautiously into the brush and found a dead man. Nathan doubled back, caught up his horse and rode toward the finish line. It seemed everybody had congregated there, and Nathan soon learned why. The shooting had ceased and an ominous quiet reigned. The big roan’s rider sat on the ground, the left shoulder of his shirt bloody. Bess McQueen was doing her best to calm the riderless Diablo, but everyone else seemed in shock.

  On the ground, on their backs, lay Byron Silver and Eulie Prater. Cotton Blossom had taken a position beside Eulie. Lifting his lean muzzle toward the heavens, he howled mournfully. Blood soaked the entire left side of Eulie’s shirt. A slug had torn into Silver’s right side, just above the butt of his Colt. Silently Nathan knelt beside Eulie and took her wrist, seeking a pulse. It was there, but one look at her pale face told him it no longer mattered, for on her lips was a red froth. Sick to the depths of his soul, tears blinding his eyes, Nathan knelt there, never wanting to rise. Then he remembered Silver lying there, perhaps dying, and taking a limp wrist, sought a pulse. It too was detectable, but weak. Sleeving his eyes dry, Nathan forced himself to look at Silver’s face. There was no telltale froth on Silver’s lips.

  “Nathan ...”

  Her voice was no more than a whisper, but Nathan heard. Eulie’s eyes were dull with pain, but they were open, desperately seeking his. Others had crowded around, but Nathan ignored them. On his knees he leaned close.

  “Diablo ... won...” she whispered. “He ... won ..”

  Those were her last words. Nathan got blindly to his feet and through tear-dimmed eyes, found himself face to face with Drew Shanklin.

  “Damn it,” Shanklin snarled, “you and Silver are responsible for this. It was you they were after ...”

  Nathan brought up a bone-crushing right all the way from his knees, behind it all the anguish and fury that engulfed his soul. It smashed into Shanklin’s jaw, lifted him off the ground, and dropped him into an unconscious heap under the hooves of Silver’s grulla. Blind with fury, Nathan jacked a shell into the chamber of his Winchester. He paused only when he felt a hand on his arm.

  “Barnabas’s gone for a doctor,” said Bess McQueen. “I’ll have some of the men wrap Eulie in some blankets and take her to the buckboard.”

  “You ... you knew about her,” Nathan said wonderingly.

  “A woman always knows,” said Bess. “She had a home with us, and I don’t believe she would ever have left. Now she’ll be with us always.”

  “Thank you,” Nathan said brokenly. “She wanted ... very little, and God knows, that’s all she ever got ... from me ..”

  Cotton Blossom stood over Eulie and growled. Nathan had to restrain him so that Eulie could be taken away. When her body was placed in McQueen’s buckboard, Cotton Blossom stationed himself beneath it and resumed his mournful howling. McQueen soon returned with a doctor whose name was never mentioned. The doctor only looked at the rider with the bloody shoulder and went immediately to Byron Silver. Kneeling, he raised Silver enough to probe his back. The doctor spoke.

  “The slug went on through. Unless it damaged his vitals, he has a chance. But he’s lost a lot of blood. Where will you be taking him?”

  “To my place,” McQueen said. “We have a buckboard.”

  “I’ll dress his wound, then, and you can take some laudanum with you. I can have another look at him in the morning. Wrap him in blankets, keep him warm, and when he become feverish, pour whiskey down him.”

  Quickly he cut away Silver’s shirt, doused the ugly wound with disinfectant, and bound it securely. He then turned to the other wounded man, leaving McQueen, Nathan, and several of McQueen’s friends to carry the blanket-wrapped Silver to McQueen’s buckboard. McQueen drew a sharp breath when he saw the other blanket-shrouded body already in the buckboard. When they got Silver stretched out, McQueen turned away, cursing bitterly under his breath.

  “Barnabas,” said one of his friends, “two of the sidewinders tried to run. We gunned ’em down.”

  “How many were there?” McQueen asked.

  “Four,” said Nathan, answering the question. “I got one of them, and I reckon Silver got one.”

  “Nathan,” McQueen said, “I’m a damned old fool who ought to be gut-shot for allowing her to ride that horse.”

  “Barnabas,” said Nathan, “if she could have been stopped, I’d have stopped her. It was her life, her way, and she died a winner.”

  Bess drove the buckboard while McQueen rode his horse and led Diablo. Nathan followed with Silver’s grulla. When they reached McQueen’s place, Nathan and McQueen lifted Silver from the buckboard and carried him into the McQueen house. Bess had insisted on it, and turned down the covers to make the wounded Silver comfortable. Nathan removed Silver’s boots and it was then that he remembered his promise to Silver. But that would have to wait. He had no intention of leaving Eulie in the buckboard, nor did Bess McQueen.

  “Bring Eulie inside,” Bess said. “She’s been staying here at the house with us. She can spend this last night in her own bed.”

  Nathan and McQueen brought Eulie in and placed her on the bed in a back room that Bess had fixed up especially for her. Cotton Blossom trotted in and lay down beside the bed.

  “I’d better put him out,” said Nathan.

  “No,” Bess said. “Let him stay. His loss is as great as yours.”

  Bess prepared supper, and after all that had happened, Nathan found he still had an appetite. As he ate, he told the McQueens the little he knew about Byron Silver and of his promise to Silver.

  “I believe whatever he had planned to do depended on his getting forces together before Stumberg’s Queen of Diamonds returns to New Orleans From St. Louis,” said Nathan. “I think it’s time I had a look at whatever is hidden in Silver’s boot.”

  McQueen, being nearest the room where Silver lay, brought the boot and handed it to Nathan. Without difficulty he found the slit in the leather, and the first item he brought forth was the key Silver had stolen by wax impression. Besides the key, Nathan found only a thin strip of paper. When he had unfolded it, there were just two printed lines. They read: Office of the Attorney General, Washington, D.C.

  “God Almighty,” said McQueen, “a government man.”

  “Yes,” Nathan said, “and now I know why he didn’t talk about himself or why he worked for Stumberg.”

  “That little piece of paper could have become his death warrant,” said McQueen, “and I wonder why he carried it at all? He could have remembered th
e address.”

  “I don’t know,” Nathan said, “unless he feared a situation such as this, where he had to depend on somebody else to make contact for him.”

  “Contacting the attorney general’s office could get you killed,” said McQueen. “Any message you send will likely fall into Stumberg’s hands. From what I hear, he pays handsomely for information from any source.”

  “This one won’t matter,” Nathan replied. “It’s a code, and there’s only two words. Silver told me that and I’m to send it by telegraph, without a signature. The hell of it is, I don’t know what to do after that.”

  “I’d say you’re to wait at the telegraph office,” said McQueen. “Those code words are to tell Silver’s people where he is. Or in this case, where you are. There are Union soldiers in town, and they have a private telegraph.”

  “That’s sensible,” Nathan said, “and I reckon I’d better ride in and do it tonight. I can’t believe Stumberg would leave everything in the hands of those bushwhackers. I’d be plumb disappointed in him if he didn’t leave orders for Silver and me to be shot on sight, in case either of us survived the bushwhacking.”

  “If you start now, you’ll have all night for Washington to contact you. There must be a powerful reason for everything coming together at this particular time.”

  “There is,” Nathan said, “and this key plays a strong part. It gives me an idea as to what Silver reckoned is about to happen tomorrow night. Whatever happens tonight, I’ll be here in the morning to ... to say goodbye to Eulie.”

  Nathan rode carefully, reaching town without incident. He remembered where the telegraph office was—he and Eulie had passed it on St. Charles that first day they had ridden into New Orleans. Entering the office, Nathan quickly wrote the Washington address on the form provided, following it with his two-word message. For a moment the little man in wire-rimmed spectacles studied it.

  “Why, that’s the same ...” His voice trailed off.

  “The same what?” Nathan demanded.

 

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