Madigan
Page 1
Madigan
R. Howard Trembly
R. Howard Trembly
Madigan
Chapter 1
The big Irishman struck the match to the side of his pant leg with a quick upward movement of the hand and watched as it came to life in a stab of yellow-white flame. Holding the neatly wrapped bundle of six dynamite sticks in his other hand, a humorless smile spread across his sinister face as he put the flame to the fuse and watched it start to burn in a shower of sparks. Harry O’Neill’s six-feet, two-inch body of pile-driving muscle shook with anticipation at the thought of what he was about to do. The day was cool, but O’Neill felt a hot flash of evil move down his spine until beads of grime-filled perspiration broke out on his forehead.
A gust of cold wind coming up the steep canyon wall from below carried a few sparks from the dynamite fuse into a clump of dry grass at O’Neill’s feet, catching it on fire. But the Irishman ignored it, keeping all his attention on the man camped below while the quick-burning fuse grew shorter.
As O’Neill drew in a slow, deep breath, his cruel, hard eyes narrowed as one imagined a hawk might do just before the kill. But this darkly tanned face was no hawk’s face; covered with deep scar-like lines that gave it an ominous, almost sadistic appearance under a crop of short blazing red hair that somehow looked out of place was the face of a cold-blooded butcher-a killer that in a few seconds would blow the man called Madigan to hell and back. With one powerful throw, O’Neill hurled the deadly package in a high arc toward his unsuspecting victim below.
As if in slow motion, the smoking bomb sailed outward, leaving a wispy thin trail of white smoke behind it. O’Neill, unable to contain himself any longer at the imminent revenge he was about to experience, let forth with a burst of laughter that reverberated across the canyon like cannon fire. It was all the warning the man below needed.
In a fragment of a second, Madigan threw himself to the ground while palming his Colt in one easy motion. Like an athlete trained from years of practice, Madigan’s powerfully built body sprang into action. While his vision tunneled in on the target, he cocked the hammer and squeezed the trigger of his.44. The two explosions sounded as one, and the concussion and searing heat drew the air from Madigan’s lungs, pinning him to the ground like a swat from a giant fly swatter.
On the canyon rim above, O’Neill was caught completely off guard, not even having time to duck out of the way. At the burst, the shock wave rolled up the canyon wall like a fast-moving dust storm slamming O’Neill backward off his feet and momentarily knocking him unconscious. Suddenly coming back to his senses, he was astounded at what had happened. Although he could not believe that any man was that fast and lethal with a six-gun, he own eyes told him it was true.
Picking himself off the ground, he cursed the air around him to vent what had happened while wiping the dust from his face and hair. O’Neill knew at this time and place there was only one decision to be made. The killer brushed the debris off the front of his shirt, then quickly caught his horse, swung into the saddle, and rode away at a full gallop, still damning the day like a man gone mad. If Captain Madigan was still alive, there would be another day, and with it, another opportunity. But for now the odds were no longer in O’Neill’s favor.
It had only been a few weeks since Madigan had resigned from the army to do some prospecting and he had no way of knowing O’Neill was a free man. Now lying here dazed, one thought kept creeping into his mind: he had to stay alive and find the man whose laugh he would never forget, the demented laugh of the only man crazy enough to carry out this deed, the one and only Harry O’Neill.
The explosion was just far enough away to hurt Madigan bad but not quite kill him. He could feel the warm blood dripping around his eyes and ears from the concussion, and Madigan knew it was a miracle he could still see at all. Every muscle in his body ached and from time to time he coughed up bright red blood. Rolling painfully over on his back he raised up on one elbow and turned his head to look around.
There laying in the dirt some fifty feet away were the bodies of his horse and pack mule. The explosion had been much closer to the animals and it was their bodies that had absorbed the full blast, shielding Madigan from its deadly destruction. Silently he swore again to kill Harry O’Neill if it took the rest of his life. Then everything faded to black.
He must have laid unconscious for hours before coming to again. When he did regain consciousness it was little more than a walking daze, a fog, from which everything reeled and danced before him. Without a horse and only the water in his canteens, it was safe to say he was in a bad situation. Being extremely weak from loss of blood didn’t help matters either. Even the smallest exertion made Madigan’s head reel and he was unsure whether any water would stay down, but he would not give up to the pain. He would force himself to go on-to live-if for no reason other than to make O’Neill pay for this and the other crimes he had committed.
Being a man that was used to taking care of himself, Madigan crawled to his canteen and took a long slow drink of the cold water, letting it settle in his stomach before chancing to move, then taking his knife, he cut his extra shirt into strips. Within the hour he’d cleaned and bound his wounds. Madigan felt a little better afterward and to his relief was no longer coughing up blood, although his insides felt like they were on fire every time he took another sip of water. Looking toward the west, he judged by the sun that it would be dark in one, maybe two hours at the most.
One thing Madigan knew for sure was that he would have to move out of the area quickly no matter how much agony he was in. After dark the animals’ remains would more than likely bring in a bear or pack of wolves. He was in no shape to tangle with either, so he carefully hid his saddle and pack where he would be able to find them later, after first hanging the food from the pack out of reach of any bear. A bear may not be able to see well, but it sure could smell food and unless it was hung out of reach, it would stop at nothing to get at it. Then Madigan put the rest of the jerky in his coat pocket and started off at a slow walk.
In the fog of Madigan’s confused mind, he remembered hearing it said that the smell of a wounded man would draw wolves from miles away. He didn’t know if it was true or not, but it wasn’t a pleasant thought as he stumbled slowly through the trees. While it was still light he could drive them off with his Winchester, but come nightfall the advantage fell heavily in the wolves’ favor. Madigan needed to find shelter soon. Being weak and wounded, he no doubt would be the number one item on some predator’s menu. Wouldn’t matter if it were a wolf, bear, or mountain lion. Any one of them would have an easy time of it with the shape he was in. He had to stay alert no matter what.
Slowly, the realization came into his dazed mind that this very morning he had passed a small rawhide ranch. It wasn’t much, just a rough hewn log cabin, cook shack, and bunkhouse with a few fences stuck in the middle of a small meadow. Not wanting to waste time, even though the thought of hot food was tempting, Madigan had kept to the ridge. But he had taken sharp notice of the smoke coming from the chimney of the cook shack.
Now, he reasoned, with any luck he could be back to the outfit by next morning, if the wolves didn’t get him first.
Night fell and with it a crispness that reminded him that spring was late this year, and there was still the possibility of snow in these higher mountain valleys. If it began snowing, Madigan’s chances of survival would drop drastically.
He was pondering this possibility when somewhere off to his left an owl hooted at something passing through the night. Several times deer crossed in front of him, stopping to take a quick look before moving on, somehow sensing that he was not a threat to them.
Then he heard the cry of a wolf a short distance away, answered by another, then another. A
t the howl of the wolf, Madigan froze in his tracks not daring to move while listening for any noise of the wolves coming closer. He glanced around in a desperate search for a tree that would get him high enough off the ground when the wolves came. Soon there was another cry, this time more distant than the last, then another even more distant, and Madigan realized to his great relief that he was downwind from the wolves and that they were more than likely honing in on his dead animals. Had he chosen to stay instead of moving on into the night, he would have been their prey and more’n likely part of their meal by morning. He prayed they wouldn’t cross his scent on their way to the carcasses of his horse and mule.
Soon a light mist began to fall. Pulling his coat tighter around his neck trying to stay warm, he switched his rifle from one hand to the other so that he could keep the other hand in a pocket to keep his fingers from going numb. Through the night he walked, gritting his teeth at the pain.
An hour after first light he spotted the rawhider’s cabin down in a small valley. Smoke curled up from the chimney meant it would be warm inside. And right now what he needed most was to get some warmth back in his bones. He just hoped the rancher would be friendly.
“Hello, the cabin!” he yelled with all the strength he had left when a hundred yards out. For a long minute nothing happened and he wondered if he’d been heard, then a rifle barrel was suddenly thrust out between the shutters of the one lone window in the front of the cabin.
“Who be it that disturbs me home?” came a voice with a strong Scottish accent.
From the sound of it, Madigan wasn’t going to be welcome. But welcome or not, he would freeze if he didn’t get warm soon.
“Sam Madigan, lately of the U.S. Cavalry. I’m hurt and cold,” he said in a weak voice. Another moment of silence.
“Well then, don’t just stand there like a fool, Captain. Come in where it’s warm and a fresh pot of coffee’s brewing on the stove.”
Madigan had just started toward the door when a strange sound began to drift eerily from within the cabin walls. He stopped to listen-that sound. He would recognize it anywhere. The man was obviously one of the worst players of the pipes Madigan had ever heard. The sound rose and fell, whimpered and squawked, then peaked with ear-splitting authority before falling off to a whisper, sounding like the death squeal of a mortally wounded rabbit.
Pushing the door open, he was not surprised to see Sergeant Golden Husbands sitting there huffing on the old bagpipes he’d carried with him since he was a boy fresh from the highlands of Scotland.
Looking up, the Scotsman grinned. “Thought I’d welcome you right proper, laddie,” he said thrusting a big paw into Madigan’s shivering hand.
“Been a long time, Sergeant. See you can’t play those windbags any better than you used to,” Madigan said weakly, nodding toward the patched and battered bagpipes.
“You never were one for the sweet sound of the highlands were you, laddie?” The Scot leaned over and turned up the coal oil lamp that set beside him on a small table. “Well, look at you, laddie! Seems you been sitting too close to the fire,” he said shaking his head in bewilderment. “We better get you patched up. How’d you be gettin’ those nasty burns, my friend?”
While the Scotsman cleaned and bound his wounds, Madigan explained what happened the day before and how he’d walked all night to get to the cabin. Goldie made him some bacon and eggs and afterward showed him to the cot in the corner.
“You can sleep the day through if you have a mind to. You don’t have to worry about O’Neill hunting you here,” the Scot said as he pulled the blanket over the wounded man. “I’ve got a couple of men working for me and I’ll have them stay close by in case that swamp lizard tries anything.
“Best thing for you is to get as much rest as you can. I’ll not play you to sleep with the pipes being you’re not a true music lover and all,” he said, chuckling.
“By the way,” the Scotsman asked, “why is O’Neill hunting you?” Madigan’s jaw tightened against the pain, then slowly relaxed.
“You wouldn’t have known about it, Sergeant, ‘cause you had already mustered out of the Cavalry by then. But about six or seven months ago O’Neill raped and murdered one of the enlisted men’s wives, buried her body, and went about his business as if nothing had happened. Most people believed the girl had run away with a drummer on one of the many wagon trains that came through the fort. You know it happened all the time, a young girl marries a soldier to get away from her folks, then finds life at the fort worse than what she ran away from. She was just about forgotten by everyone except her husband. Girls take off with drummers all the time, just a fact of life on the frontier.
“Then one night O’Neill was in town drinking with some of his friends. You know how he liked to drink. Always said he could hold it but couldn’t. Anyway, he really tied one on this night. Got to bragging and it slipped out that Alice Jane-that was the dead girl’s name-had let him have his way with her. Anyway, that’s the way O’Neill told it.”
“O’Neill never could keep his mouth shut when he had booze in his belly!” Goldie injected.
“This got back to the fort and we started a quiet investigation into the matter, but we couldn’t find anything with so many trains coming through the fort headed on the Oregon Trail, so we were forced to let it drop.
“Then old Hairless Jones-you remember Jones, one of the best trappers in those parts-came in one night with Alice Jane’s body wrapped in blankets. Seems O’Neill hadn’t put enough dirt over her after he killed her. Jones saw a wolf pulling at a piece of cloth sticking out of the ground and investigated.
“When Jones brought the body in, O’Neill was out of the fort on patrol. Somehow he got wind of the discovery and hightailed it out of there. I was the one sent to bring him back in to stand trial and that’s what I did.
“He was found guilty of murder and sentenced to be hanged the following day. Funny thing, all the time I was bringing him back to the fort he acted as if he blamed me for his troubles. Didn’t matter that he killed the girl and all that. Just blamed me for catching him. Later after the trial, he said he’d see me dead before he hanged. Just the threat of a mad man, I figured. Anyway, the next day he’d hang and that would be that. Only thing was, one of his friends slipped a gun to him that night and he shot the guard and got away.”
“Seems like he almost made good on that promise,” Goldie said. “Now you better try to get some sleep and let your body heal.”
Madigan nodded his head in agreement and laid back on the cot. Within a few minutes he was dead to the world. It was already dark when he awoke to find Goldie coming through the door carrying his saddle. The rest of his pack was laid against the wall next to the door.
“Had one of me boys ride up and pick these up while you was sleeping,” he said, pointing to Madigan’s things. Goldie looked at the pack and smiled. “See you still be carrying the Sharps.”
“Never know when I might run across a herd of buffalo. Did the wolves get to my horse last night?”
“A pack of them mangy critters did until a grizzly came along and ran them off. Between the wolves and the bear, they really made a feast of your animals. Made me hired man really nervous getting your things out of there. Wasn’t too worried about the wolves in the daylight, but figured the bear might still be hanging around for another meal. Did take a chance and looked around up on the top of the cliff, though. From the tracks he saw, O’Neill must’ve hightailed it out of there the minute he threw the dynamite. Made a beeline clean out of the county from what me man tells me.”
Madigan was quiet for a long moment. “She was a good horse,” he said sadly.
For two days Madigan stayed pretty much in bed, letting his strength return. On the third day he was up before first light, out chopping wood for the cook stove when Goldie slipped up to him.
“You’ll be in need of another horse and I may have just the animal for you,” he said cheerfully.
Motioning Madigan to follo
w, he led the way down a narrow path to a corral hidden in the trees. The bunkhouse stood a little to the side. They were well hidden, for Madigan had not seen them when he rode through the area the morning of the attack.
The bunkhouse door opened as they approached and a man in his early sixties holding a rifle stepped out and waved at them, then moved back inside out of the cold.
“That’s Jones,” Goldie said. “He’s a good man to have around in a fight. If O’Neill had come sneakin’ around here, he’d have to work to keep his hide. Jones had a run-in with that coyote himself a few years back and would like nothing more than to catch him in his sights.”
They approached a gate and stopped. In the corral stood the most magnificent buckskin stallion Madigan had ever seen. When the horse saw the men approach he snorted, then pawed the ground with his hoof, daring them to come closer.
“He’s a mighty fine looking animal,” Madigan said, impressed with the great horse before them.
“That’s what I thought too when I first laid me eyes on him. Took all three of us to corner him so I could get a rope over his neck.”
Madigan saw that the horse’s hind legs were hobbled and said as much. Knowing Goldie to be a gentle man, except in battle, he was puzzled as to why. The answer came shortly.
“When we first tried to catch him, we used a brush corral and chased him into it along with some of his mares,” Goldie explained. “He jumped the fence like he had wings. Later that night he sneaked back and chewed through the rope that held the mares, turning them all loose and ruining two months’ work for us. So when we finally got a rope on him we put the hobbles on-put ‘em on his back legs so he wouldn’t chew through them. You can bet it was a fight getting them on without getting our heads kicked in. Since then he’s been pretty quiet as long as we keep our distance.
“Just no other way to keep him from taking off again. Hated to do it to such a fine animal but there was no other way,” he said nodding toward the hobbles. “Anyway, he’s not my problem any more,” Goldie said with a laugh.