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The Hell Bent Kid

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by Charles O Locke




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  The Hell Bent Kid

  A Novel

  Charles O. Locke

  Contents

  1. Statement by Henry Restow

  2. Narrative by Lohman

  3. Lohman Starts His Trip

  4. Lohman Starts across the Dry

  5. Lohman Near His Finish

  6. New Acquaintances for Lohman

  7. Lohman Does Some Shooting

  8. Camp Has Some More Visitors

  9. Letter from Amos Bradley to Henry Restow

  10. Lohman Turns South

  11. Lohman Meets a Stranger

  12. Mrs. Bawbeen Takes a Hand

  13. Lohman Makes a Getaway

  14. The Trail South

  15. The Tool-Shed Door

  16. Lohman Finds His Father

  17. Lohman Meets a Relative

  18. Lohman Goes to a Party

  19. The Letters of Bradley and Restow

  20. Statement by Amos Bradley to Restow on the Occasion of His Visit

  About the Author

  1

  Statement by Henry Restow

  After the first Indian fighting quieted down, and the hard-pan camps and towns moved west, killings were less common in northwest Texas than people were led to think. So my ranch got a name for itself when the Kid was with us. “They’ve got a murderer penned up over at the Restow place” was the way people put it.

  This Kid—Tot Lohman—was no murderer and was not penned up. He knew he had to stay on the place, the way I had fixed it with the sheriff. Also, he had killed Shorty Boyd in self-defense, although I think he made a mistake in not saying how it was done. The Boyds said Shorty had been shot. Lohman let it go that way. There was supposed to be more honor to it, if it involved a bullet. On both sides.

  When Tot Lohman was probated to me, he had one thing on his mind. His family had been pretty well wiped out, except one brother and his father, who suddenly took consumption and seemed to be dying a slow death. The father, who had been a fine peace officer, pulled up stakes and went into the territory of New Mexico, looking like a skeleton that walked and leaving his son in Texas, which led to the shooting, if it was a shooting, that landed the boy on me.

  Lohman wanted to follow his father bad. He wanted to help his father. The father never revealed just what he wanted. He had become sick and vague on most things.

  When I hired Lohman I offered him eight dollars a month as a ranch hand. The grown hands got eleven. Lohman held out, saying he could do a man’s work and when I agreed on full pay, he immediately cut it back to nine to pay me for my favor to him with the law—the difference in pay he meant, this would pay me off. This seems strange but it was like Lohman. He wanted to be thought of as a man but he wanted to pay his way in everything. He even tried to pay me for some cast-off clothes which he needed badly. Also, three times I arranged for him to send small sums of money to his father. He had managed to save these out of his earnings.

  At the time Lohman came to me he gave his age as 18. He was between 10 and 11 above five feet, I would say, thin but well-muscled, with brown hair and peculiar, dark, blue eyes. He was a fair worker with cattle. Only fair. But he was good with horses because he liked them almost as well as guns. He was the best shot with a rifle I have ever seen, and I doubt if a greater natural genius with a rifle ever lived in these parts. I have never seen Lohman dangerous, but imagine he could be very dangerous with a rifle, if sufficiently aroused.

  One other qualification Lohman had was his ability to write a good hand, something his mother had taught him. Also from some early training he had started to keep a sort of diary and continued to do so, which I am told requires a good deal of character in the individual.

  My daughter on her two visits said of him: “He is too young to have that shadow on his face.”

  2

  Narrative by Lohman

  When I first agreed to stay at the Restow place after I had killed Shorty Boyd, it seemed the sensible thing to do. I had planned before the killing to work for Restow. Now that I was probated to him, he was willing to hire me.

  My father had gone into Mexico, and it was thought I would some day go down there and join him. But not hearing from my father worried me. Also, while I wanted no trouble with the Boyds, it got said around that I was hiding from them on the Restow ranch. Also, I began to see a change in the attitude of the hands, and in Marcus, the foreman.

  Marcus had never seemed to like me from the start, due to nothing but natural dislike. I also felt this way. But I was always civil and obedient to him.

  I spoke to him on a certain day about seeing Mr. Restow and he passed the word. Restow passed the word back by the cook who cooked for both the big house and the outfit that when I saw the shade up in the big room I should go in.

  Sat on the fence after dinner and waited. About one the shade went up and I went in. This time I made it strong to Mr. Restow about getting off the ranch and down to my father in the territory.

  Mr. Restow had some letters to write, but said that he and Marcus and I would talk about it that night.

  He said he thought Marcus’s advice would be good for both of us, Marcus knowing something of the New Mexico territory. I doubted Marcus’s attitude to me would be fair, but agreed.

  Almost immediately after this something happened that could have changed my mind, if I had felt it had changed Marcus.

  When I went back to my corral work we were having a cap of rain. I saw Marcus at the shed end near the chutes. He was leaning over pouring grain from a grainsack to a nosebag. Both his horse and a little burro-colored horse I owned were loose-hobbled halfway up the slope behind the corral. But inside the fence was a mean little mustang horse named Pancho. This horse we had all teased a little and Marcus had spur-marked. He was coming up from behind before I could yell.

  That little horse took Marcus’s slicker collar in his teeth and shook him as a dog will a rat. Then he began to rear and strike with new-shod forefeet, and drawing blood.

  The next time the mustang reared, pulling Marcus well off the ground, I threw a wheel wrench under him hitting his testicles square. He yelled and dropped Marcus.

  After we got Marcus in his bunk, Mr. Restow wanted to get a doctor from Marshall, but Marcus bucked. He was proud of his physical strength, and insisted we go right ahead and talk that night, as planned. So while the rest played blackjack, and one hand played The Dove softly on the mouth organ, Mr. Restow and I sat beside Marcus’s bed, which was the only one in the bunkhouse, the rest bunks.

  Marcus started to roll a cigaret, botched it and dropped tobacco all over the blanket, and rolled another. Mr. Restow tapped the floor with one of his 100 dollar Juarez boots.

  “I say let the boy go to his father,” said Marcus. “His father needs him. He is getting to be no good around here. His father is in trouble. He wants to join in and help him. That’s natural.”

  Restow said: “I’m willing to let him leave the ranch but I want him to head east. Tot’s father is old enough to take care of himself. If Tot goes west and south he will surely meet the Boyds and get killed.”

  “Pretty good with a rifle,” said Marcus.

  Restow said nothing.

  Marcus got his cigaret going. “You’ll never get the boy to stay here.” He frowned at me. I think his dislike of me had been somewhat cured by my act that afternoon. But it was hard to tell about Marcus. He had been made bitter by Comanches disfiguring his mouth with rawhide when a child. He had a perpetual smile, but not a cheerful one. You could never tell whether he was pleased or an
gry even with himself, such as after his champion rope work, using the biggest wire-plaited honda I ever saw.

  But he turned on me sharp: “All right, let’s chase it out in the clear. You got some gossip from that freighter down at the Silver Spur. Well, the same thing came to me. I understand your father is mixed up with lawless men and threatened with jail. He must be light-headed. He seems to need a guardian. But I don’t think you qualify. It takes an older man.”

  Mr. Restow said: “I can explain this being mixed up with lawless men. Tot’s father is cooking for this Englishman’s outfit. The outfit is having some trouble with cattle inspectors. The country is still rough down there. All kinds of people are moving in and out of Socorro and places. There are cattle-lifters, of course, but ranchers are also stealing from each other. I ought to know as I have something of a stake down there. Lohman is cooking because he’s not fit for heavy work. It don’t make sense Lohman would one day be a peace officer up here, with his fine record, and the next day turn into a cattle thief.”

  “Funny things happen,” Marcus said.

  Restow was getting angry now, and Marcus saw this and said: “Why not let the kid speak his piece?”

  So then I did. I told them I knew more than they gave me credit for. I told them I knew the two younger Boyds were back from the east after being sent to school there or for a trip. That it was well known Old Man Boyd would not hold them down. That it was only a matter of time till I would get shot or shot at on or off the ranch. I told them I wanted to get to my father bad and was determined to ride west and south and not east just for safety.

  I then played my strongest card, which was that Restow was now president of the Peaceable Committee of North Texas made up to keep peace, and that if I got shot on his ranch, it might be embarrassing.

  Restow opened his eyes wide at this. Marcus laughed right out. Till the day I die I will never know whether Marcus wanted me to go or stay. But I would think he wanted me to go.

  They asked me would I take the stage and I said no. I would have to change twice and then maybe not make it. Mr. Restow wanted to give me a horse. I said I had my own and he said, “If you mean that little mouse-colored pony with the set-fast back sore you had better let me give you a real horse.” But I said no I was used to Jimmy.

  We got up from our chairs then and Restow went ahead while I followed him outside. He asked me about guns and I said I had my rifle, and about clothes and I said I had enough, and about money, and I showed him how I carried the dollars I had, each silver dollar under a little sewed patch inside my waistband, so I could get a dollar by knifing a thread loose.

  He said goodbye, and expressed regret. He handed me a letter he had written to a friend in the territory.

  I had won my argument without telling what was the most in my thinking. I had heard so much about the Boyds since Shorty’s death that I was getting a feeling that we should meet and get it over with.

  That night I did not sleep well. I kept thinking about the trip, but also my mind kept going back to the past. I had been the home boy of my family. I was with my mother a lot till she died, because she needed me, and what she told me stayed with me a long time. This all took place while two of my brothers were growing up, getting to be peace officers and getting killed fast. My mother taught me to read and write and counseled me good.

  My mind kept going back to the times when on fair days my mother would take me out on the flat under some trees where the only sound except her reading was the wind and the rustle. She had a mouth like a girl. I used to watch her lips forming the words. She read slowly and carefully and then would stop and explain. She was a Quaker woman, my mother was.

  Womenkind have soft ways and I think my mother prevented me from hardening up like my brothers. But after she died, I toughened up fast. My father taught me to shoot. But you don’t have to be hard to shoot. In fact in some ways it helps to be soft when shooting—and careful. To be easy. To use your mind.

  3

  Lohman Starts His Trip

  Marcus and I were up before anyone the next morning. I fried some beans for myself and shared coffee with Marcus. He was on his big black in the yard when I got on my horse. He sat there looking at me. He had on a clean shirt and a Sunday hat.

  Mr. Restow had insisted he must ride to Toscoso or Twist to see a doctor about his back. If he went to Toscoso, he would also see his girl, a prostitute.

  Marcus said: “You better keep your mouth buttoned over in the territory. There is also good shots over there. I would advise you to get into Socorro below the Panhandle across the Grande, but down there you might get yourself Pecosed.”

  I agreed.

  “If,” said Marcus, “you figure on coming back here for your job, forget it. You can’t work for me again. You are big-balled for a shoat.”

  I was about to say it was my understanding Restow did the hiring and firing, but Marcus had started off.

  The road I was to take forked off north about a mile west of the Restow place. Marcus could have taken the South Fork after riding the mile with me. But he paralleled for half a mile, and then threw a pistol shot at me. A cut of dust showed in front of my pony, stopping him.

  Sometimes a cowpoker will shoot wild at another to attract his attention, or for fun. So I took it easy. But when a second shot was laid over the first, I out with the rifle from the scabbard and shot three times at Marcus.

  Marcus wiggled his fingers at me and laughed. I could see him laughing with his head back, as he ran his horse off behind a pitch of land. What worried me was not his shooting at me for meanness. It was my rifle had jammed after the third shot. It made me wish I again had the Spencer that had been stolen from me.

  As I went on with the Staked Plains on my right, and later when I was forced into the edge of them, I kept thinking about this, worrying about it. Noon my eyes at a pool where I drank looked like holes in a pan of dust. The heat and dust were terrible and I wasn’t used to them. The Restow ranch had softened me up.

  I put miles behind me that day, pressing Jimmy hard. That night I slept out near a small half-dry creek, but near people, because just before bedding down I stopped at a Mex woman’s place. She was out in front of her little dobe shack drying washed grain, with strings of chili behind her, so I asked for some little bite.

  A little girl came out of the place then. There was a tortilla laid flat on her hand with gravied beans on it. She was dragging her right leg that was wizened away. I got a few drinks from their well which took care of quite a neighborhood, and made the little girl a cornhusk doll like I had made for my sister Julia.

  Next morning the day was fine, but hot from early hours on. After a good start, the sun got even hotter. I moved north to the dryer ground of the North Stakes. I got some longer and dryer miles behind me that day and made really good time.

  At a little water place with a grab of box elder I slept and started off again. The sun heated up but the view was wonderful. The high plains were flat here, except for the low hills and midget buttes to the north. Smells got sharp, the heat baking out the oil from the saddle skirts that I had oiled heavy because of their age.

  The wind blew the green-smelling suds back from Jimmy’s mouth. At sundown Jimmy was heaving. He worried the bit between heaves so I took off the bridle and rode him with the hackamore. Then walk and lead him awhile.

  That Jimmy was a willing pony, even half sick. He had had too much green feed without being used to it. He was almost a pet horse, and would shake hands.

  When I stopped I cleaned my rifle. On the go, I had worried about the sun baking the oil out of her, so in the saddle I had slapped on a finger full of bacon grease. Now I removed this because of the salt.

  I had remembered a water hole and some box elders I was now headed for. They were there all right, but the creek was dry as dead skin, except for a small pool going down fast I had one water can, no canteen, so I went easy.

  With Jimmy hobbled, I ate raw stuff and heated some coffee which I hav
e never liked. I was tired and jumpy, knowing I was in the Boyd country.

  After my last trip for water, I saw the biggest rattler I ever saw, sliding down to drink there. He saw me but paid me no mind of course. He looked half sick and something was wrong with one of his eyes, like scaling over. His smell was bad and when I saw where he came from, an old gopher hole, I moved up there and the smell would of sickened a coyote.

  So I moved around but when the slack wind moved around with me the smell came with it. So I picked a little kind of half-dust hogback-and-rock and got down behind her, poor cover against smell or anything.

  Wrapped up, I watched the stars in the sky. Jimmy seemed to eat all night. All night I could hear him clanking his hobble iron and chewing. What on, I wondered. Also I tried to sleep without success. My mind kept wandering to the Boyds, and also went over the past events of my life.

  I remembered the day the Comanches raided our farm to get horses and how my father was away and I was there with my older brothers, I being 12. I remembered how we got the horses into the barn, but my baby sister Julia was arrow-shot coming back from the creek with a small fish one of us had caught and left there. And how my mother came out on the doorstep and called to Harley, who was always slow, and Nevin picked up the baby, turning his back to my mother and hacking off the shaft with his knife.

  And I recalled how my mother sat on the doorstep holding Julia the rest of the day long after the Indians had gone with only one horse of ours, not moving nor speaking to anyone.

  Then I went back over the poetry books she had read me out under a tree, and the deep-cold winter when she died, with a wet, beautiful spring afterward, the sky like a big blue glass dome all the way from Cap Rock to the Llano Estacado.

  When the first light came, I got up shaky and sleepy, just in time to see the ridge of higher ground not standing but flowing northeast to southwest. Then I saw it was a rattler, maybe a new one or the same one, going down to drink. He crawled on the profile, making the land seem to move. I decided I had picked a snaky place.

 

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