by Short, Luke;
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Dead Freight for Piute
Luke Short
1
Cole Armin used that last fifteen minutes of daylight, because it would have to last him until morning. He used it to look at the girl in the seat opposite him and to wonder at her again.
Two days and two nights on a stage climbing from the desert country in the high reaches was a great breaker of conventions. The tedium, the jolting, the noise, the lurching, the dust and the heat could make passengers forget disparity in wealth and opinions and level them into one suffering mass of humanity. But not this girl. Two days and two nights had stiffened her already-straight back, closed her full mouth and steeled the reserve in her green eyes. Dust had powdered her maroon silk traveling dress and bonnet and had laid its gray film on her blond hair. It even sifted into her long eyelashes, making her blink with discomfort. But not once did her reserve crack, and not once had she spoken unless spoken to by Cole or the only other passenger, a mild-looking little man in puncher’s dirty clothes.
Right now she was looking out the window at the first of the pines that sprang up above the canyon country, and her expression was one of utter weariness. Cole suddenly made up his mind.
He leaned forward, elbows on knees, and because the stage was going slow on the uphill pull he did not have to speak loudly.
“Look, miss. How long since you slept?”
Her attention was yanked around to him immediately, the sound of his voice seeming to surprise her.
“Why—I don’t know.”
“I do. You didn’t sleep last night. You haven’t slept today.”
“I’m not sleepy.”
Cole ignored that. He smiled faintly and said, “We’ve got an uphill haul until long after midnight. It’ll be slow and easy and cool. You lie down on the seat and wrap up, and me and this other gent will put our feet up on the seat so’s you won’t roll off. You get some sleep.”
The girl just looked at him for a moment. Now Cole knew he hadn’t had a shave for two days and black beard stubble shadowed his cheeks and maybe gave him a lean and ferocious look, but he was also aware that he had an easy smile, blue and steady eyes that were amiable most of the time and an open manner that could be considered friendly.
He figured that the latter would cancel the former and that if further proof of innocence were needed he was dressed in a decent black suit whose trousers were tucked into half boots, black hat and a fresh checked-gingham shirt that he had changed into at the last stop. Barring the lack of a shave, he didn’t seem to himself a person who would frighten anyone.
It didn’t take long for him to see he was wrong. The girl was frightened and had been since he spoke. A kind of defiant anger was in her face as she said, “Is there any rule that says I have to sleep?”
“Why, no, not that I know of.”
“There’s none that I know of either. So if you don’t mind I won’t.”
Cole stared at her a moment, feeling the color flush up into his face. He felt a quick resentment, and while still feeling it he leaned back, lifted a long leg to the seat beside the girl and said in a voice that was unmistakably Texan, “Then I don’t reckon you’ll mind if I put my feet up there, because I aim to sleep.”
“Not at all,” the girl said coldly.
“Obliged,” Cole replied just as coldly.
He put both feet up on the opposite seat beside the girl, pulled his Stetson down over his forehead and closed his eyes. He opened them again presently to study the girl, who was looking out the window again. He had seen shy girls before, but this girl was not shy. She was from the East, likely a school-ma’am, from her correct speech, and she was pretty and proud—and scared. Of him. He closed his eyes to consider any number of reasons why she should be afraid of him, but before he did much considering he was asleep.
He was roused sometime later by a hand on his shoulder. It was a rough hand, so that he came awake with a rush, noting before he opened his eyes that the stage had stopped. He thumb-prodded his Stetson off his forehead and was looking into the barrel of a Colt .44 pointed at him through the window. Behind it was a masked face, and behind the mask a voice said roughly, “Just hold onto that hat with both hands and come out ajumpin’.”
Cole Armin came out and very leisurely. His fellow passenger was standing off to one side, both hands above his head. The girl was standing just below the step, and in the thin chill moonlight Cole could see she was excited. Two men, one big and thick, the other of medium build, both masked, stood before them with guns drawn. A third bandit had the driver covered.
“We’ll start with you,” the big man said gruffly and walked over to the puncher. He flipped a gun from the puncher’s shoulder holster, whirled him around with one shove of his big hand and pulled his pockets inside out. He found, besides a couple of horseshoe nails and a plug of tobacco, exactly fifty cents.
With a growl he placed his big boot in the seat of the puncher’s pants and shoved, and the puncher dived into the dust and lay there.
Cole was next. When the big man was in front of him Cole said mildly, “Don’t do that to me, mister. I remember things like that.”
The big bandit paused as if astonished. He chuckled then and said, “Turn around.”
“Hunh-unh. I’ve got a gun in a hip holster, and you can take that. You can take everything else, too, but I’ll watch you do it.”
“Tough, eh?” the bandit asked pleasantly.
“Not right now, no,” Cole said softly, “but I’m apt to wind up tough.”
The big bandit chuckled again and took Cole’s gun. He scorned his money, which was little, and his watch, which didn’t run anyway, and then raised a hand in mock salute to him. “I like ’em salty, mister. You can keep your money.”
Then he moved on to the girl. He stopped in front of her and without turning around said to the second bandit, “You go put your gun in the back of that Texas hero’s neck, and if he makes a move let him have it.”
The big bandit waited until his companion had his gun in Cole’s neck, and then he said to the girl, “Well, missy, what you got?”
“Nothing,” the girl said firmly.
“Goin’ to Piute?” the bandit asked pleasantly.
“Yes.”
The big bandit scrubbed his chin under his black handkerchief. “Well, lady, you don’t look like the kind of a gal who aims to make any money in a boom camp. You ain’t that kind. So if you don’t aim to make any you must have some.” He put out his hand. “Lemme look in your pocketbook.”
The girl hesitated, and the bandit snapped his fingers impatiently. Cole could see an anchor tattooed on the back of the man’s hand. He wanted to remember that, because he was afraid for what was going to happen to this stubborn girl.
The bandit looked in the pocketbook, snorted and then handed it back. He said over his shoulder to the second bandit, “Remember what I said. And you, Texas, watch yourself.”
And with that he advanced a step, put both hands around the girl’s waist and then dodged back as she lashed out at him with her hand.
He chuckled again. “Money belt, eh, miss? Well, you’ll have to take it off.”
“It is not!” the girl said furiously.
“Take your choice,” the bandit said amiably. “Either you take it off or I do.”
“Watch your tongue!” Cole said sharply. “You ain’t talkin’ to a honky-tonk girl, you fool!”
“I never said I was. Still I aim to get the money.”
“If you expect me to undress in front of you,” the girl said scornfully, “then you’d better shoo
t!”
The big bandit was embarrassed. He shifted his feet in the dust and then said in a reasonable voice, “I’m goin’ to get that money, lady. It depends on you how I git it. I don’t aim to shame you, but if you won’t string along with me I reckon I’ll have to.”
He pointed his gun off toward the side of the road. “There’s bushes out there. You hustle off there and take off that money belt in private and git back here. Now git!”
The girl stood there, breathing hard, fear and irresolution in her face. The very stance of the big bandit was implacable, and she glanced over at Cole, her eyes imploring.
“I reckon you’d better do it,” Cole said shortly. “That scum means what he says.”
The girl turned and walked off the road into the brush. Scrub oak and pine saplings grew up to the very edge of the road, and beyond them was the black depth of pine timber. The three bandits listened closely in that long night silence, until the sound of the girl’s footsteps died. The driver atop the stage spat over the side and remarked to nobody in particular, “A hell of a way to make a livin’. I’d ruther suck eggs, if you ask me.”
“Nobody ast you,” the big bandit said testily. “Any more talk out of you and you won’t have no teeth left to suck eggs with neither.”
The driver spat again and was silent. Cole studied the big man, trying to pick out something by which he could remember him. There was nothing about him except his bigness and the tattooed anchor on his left hand that was any different from anyone else.
The big man was getting impatient now. He raised his voice and bawled, “Hurry up, lady!”
There was no answer. They all listened for a brief moment, and then the bandit behind Cole said, “Why don’t she answer?”
“Hey, miss!” the big man bawled.
No answer. The third bandit up by the driver said excitedly, “I bet she’s run out!”
“Go look for her!” the big man ordered curtly.
One of the bandits ran behind the stage and crashed out into the brush. They could hear him thrashing around in the scrub oak, and presently the noise died.
“She ain’t in this brush!” the bandit bawled. “She’s went into the timber.”
“Any tracks?” the big bandit called.
A match was struck; there was a moment of silence, and then a howl of rage lifted into the night. “She’s runnin’, and right into the timber!”
The big man started to curse. The other bandit lunged off the other side of the road, yelling, “I’ll git the horses!”
The big robber rammed a gun into Cole’s midriff. “Git that other gent in the stage, and make it fast!”
The puncher who had been lying in the dust didn’t need an invitation. He streaked for the stage door and dived inside. Cole was just reaching for the door when the big man lifted his gun into the air and let go a wild and bloodcurdling yell, followed by four swift shots.
The stage horses, half broken at best, lunged into their collars and the driver started to curse. Cole grabbed the rear boot as it passed him and swung up, and the stage was off on a wild careening ride down the mountain road.
Cole climbed up on the top, holding onto the guardrails, and dropped into the seat beside the driver.
“Pull ’em up!” he yelled in the driver’s ear.
“I got to wait for an upgrade!” the driver shouted. They came to a turn, the horses at a dead gallop, and swung around it, the wheels kicking rock fragments off into the drop of a stream bed at their right.
And then they were on a long downhill slope that hugged the shoulder of a hill. The horses had used the breather to gather strength, and now they raced down the slope with the wild abandon of a panic. The road dropped more steeply, and then the stage hit the stream ford with a heavy crash that strained every timber, and the water curtained up and drenched Cole and the driver. But the horses were on an uphill pull now, and it soon broke their gallop. The driver fought them to a standstill, locked his brake and wiped the water from his eyes.
“What do you aim to do?”
Cole swung to the ground and called up to him. “Cut out a horse for me. I got a saddle and bridle here on the road. I’m goin’ back after that girl.”
While the driver unhitched one of the lead horses Cole found his sacked saddle and bridle. And then the driver eared down the horse he had cut out while Cole saddled him. Cole stepped into the saddle; the driver leaped back, and the horse started to pitch.
It took a good three minutes for the bronc to spend his temper, and then Cole put him up the long slope to where the holdup had happened. A hot anger worked at him as he rode on. He had no fear of the bandits doing the girl any real harm, but they might manhandle her and, if necessary, forcibly take the money belt away from her. And the thought of it made his blood boil.
It was a good two miles uphill to the spot where the stage had stopped, and when Cole got there he found it deserted. He reckoned, and rightly, that in their haste the three of them would forget the guns they had thrown on the ground. Cole found his own, scooping it up out of the dust without dismounting, and then he put his horse into the scrub oak.
At first the trail was plain to follow, for the three of them had crashed through the brush on each other’s heels. But once in the timber they had split up. There was nothing to do then but follow one of the tracks. He was certain they would lead him to the girl eventually, for there was little chance of her escaping. The deep carpet of rotting pine needles was scarred heavily by the passage of the horse, but even at best it was difficult trailing with the aid of the thin trickle of moonlight that sifted down through the timber. Occasionally Cole would stop to listen, but he had the sense of precious time being wasted, and he could not keep his blood from hammering in his ears until it was all that was audible.
The trail of this horseman sloped down the side of the ridge, following it at the same angle, and then, after perhaps ten minutes of slow riding, the direction suddenly changed and headed uphill. Cole knew that was where the rider ahead of him had got the signal that the girl was found.
The tracks doubled back now and went over the ridge, and then, in a spot of cleared rocky ground among the jack pines, Cole caught sight of the girl. She was lying face down among the boulders.
His heart almost stopped beating as he spurred his horse on. What had they done to her? He slipped out of the saddle and ran toward her, and then, a few feet from her, he caught the sounds of her sobbing.
He knelt by her and put a hand on her shoulder. “You all right?” She looked up then at the sound of his voice, and her face was wet with tears. She didn’t answer him, only put the back of her hand to her mouth and tried to choke back the sobs.
“Did they hurt you?” Cole asked swiftly, angrily.
She shook her head, and then, when she spoke, her voice was low and more bitter than Cole had ever known a woman’s voice could be.
“Hurt me? I wish they had! I wish they’d killed me!” She raised her eyes to him now, and he could see the despair in them. “Are you satisfied now with what you’ve done?” she asked harshly.
Cole came erect then, frowning. He was a big leggy man, standing there, with the wide shoulders and careless grace of a man bred to the saddle, and his lean face was bewildered as he placed his hands on his hips.
“Am I satisfied?” he echoed hollowly. Then he smiled. “Look, miss. I ain’t one of the robbers. I’m the man on the stage, remember?”
The girl sat up then, and Cole put a hand out to assist her. She ignored it, looking at him instead. “I know, you’re Cole Armin. Are you satisfied, I say? Did it all work out the way you hoped it would?”
Cole looked blankly at her and then knelt slowly, so that he faced her. “I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about, miss. I don’t think you do either. Maybe it’s the shock.”
“Shock!” the girl said bitterly. “It wasn’t a shock. I knew it would happen, and so did you. I just hoped I could bluff it out!”
“Talk sense!” Cole snappe
d. He put his hands on her shoulders and shook her. “You’re hysterical, I reckon.”
The girl laughed then, and her laugh was almost hysterical. “You admit who you are and then try to make me believe you’re innocent?”
“I’m Cole Armin. I’m hanged if I know how you knew it. Also, I’m innocent.”
“And you’ll claim, of course, you don’t know who I am?”
“I don’t. No ma’am.”
They stared angrily at each other for a full moment. Finally the girl murmured, “Maybe they didn’t tell you. Maybe they told you just to watch this certain girl on this certain stage.”
“Who told me?”
The girl said, watching him closely, “I’m Celia Wallace.”
Cole’s face didn’t register anything except mild puzzlement. “Is that s’posed to mean somethin’ to me, outside of the pleasure in knowin’ you?”
“And you’re Cole Armin. You must be a relation—the son or something—of Craig Armin, in Piute.”
“I am. His nephew. Why?”
“And he hasn’t told you anything—you don’t know anything about Ted Wallace?”
“Nothin’,” Cole said, shaking his head. “I haven’t seen my uncle Craig since I was four. I don’t know anything about him—or about the Wallaces.”
“I see,” the girl said softly. There was a look of scheming in her eyes now. “And why are you going to Piute?”
“To work for him. I got fevered out down in Texas. Lost everything I had. He offered me a job.”
“Doin’ what?”
“Freightin’, I think. Drivin’ mules for ore freightin’.”
The girl rose now, and Cole rose with her. She didn’t say anything, and when Cole saw she wasn’t going to he said, “Maybe you better tell me.”
The girl turned on him. “I’ll tell you!” she said in a fierce low voice. “You can take it back to him, so he’ll share his laugh with those thugs of his! Craig Armin had all the ore freighting in Piute to himself once upon a time, until my brother Ted started to buck him. You’d think with twenty mines around Piute a man wouldn’t mind sharing some of the hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of freight business. But he did mind. Ted fought him every inch of the way, until he got a few wagons and some business. All he needed was money—money for more wagons and mules and men. And I was bringing him that money. It was in that money belt that your thugs took from me tonight!”