The Quick And The Dead

Home > Other > The Quick And The Dead > Page 3
The Quick And The Dead Page 3

by Louis L'Amour


  "He moves like a cat."

  "Yes ... yes, he does."

  "He said you did very well in the settlement. He spoke well of you."

  "He said that?"

  They left the trees behind, moved out upon the bald plain. At least, Susanna thought, they can't approach us here without our seeing them. They will have to come out in the open.

  Con Vallian had disappeared. She looked around. He was gone—vanished from sight.

  "Duncan! What happened? Where did he go?"

  He stared, peered around the edges of the wagon cover toward their rear ... nothing. "Well, I'll be damned!"

  Suddenly their wagon topped out on the edge of a long slope. Before them the country was spread out—miles upon miles of pale gray-green grass and exposed ridges of red sandstone. No trees, no brush ... a few clumps of prickly pear on a slope, and far off a herd of antelope and a few distant black spots.

  There, well down the slope before them was Vallian, sitting his horse and looking the country over. Suddenly Susanna was frightened. An army could have hidden here and she would never have guessed ... or an Indian war party.

  Duncan McKaskel drew up and looked out over the wide space before them. They would camp down there tonight, and for days afterward. It was frightening.

  He shuddered suddenly, and put his hand on hers. "My God," he said softly, "to think of all that! And if anything happens to us there's nobody to help. There's no doctor, no hospital—"

  "We knew it would be that way, Duncan," she said quietly. "We talked about it."

  "That's just it. We talked about it. But we did not know! There is no way one can know without seeing it, feeling it."

  "I wonder how many have died out there? Where nobody knew?"

  "Many have died, Susanna, but more will come. There are always people who hope, who wish, who dream."

  He gathered the reins and spoke to the mules. They hesitated, leaned into their collars and be slapped them with the reins. The wagon started, and rolled on.

  Susanna's eyes went far ahead, to a small, moving dot. He must have turned slightly because the dot went from black to a kind of brown as the sun hit his buckskins.

  "We are not quite alone, Duncan," she said quietly. "He is out there. Vallian is there."

  "Yes," his eyes were somber, his lips unsmiling. "Yes, he is."

  Chapter IV

  The "settlement" was a couple of log houses and a barn. In one of the houses there was a bar, a table, and a few crudely-made chairs. Further out there were a few abandoned lean-tos and dugouts. It was in low land near the river, inclined to be swampy.

  Doc Shabbitt tilted the jug over his tin cup. He was a fat, sloppy man with small eyes and a mean, petulant mouth.

  "They wasn't alone!" he said again. "They had somebody with 'em!"

  Dobbs was a thin, duly man in ragged buckskins. "There was three of them," he insisted. "I scouted their camp, an' we all seen 'em when they come up from the river. It had to be either the woman or the boy who killed Lenny."

  "That city woman?" Shabbitt spat. "I'll kill her. If she killed my boy—"

  "She's mine." Red Hyle was a powerful man with a sullen look about him. "I done tol' you that. You lay a hand to her before I tell you an' I'll stretch your hide, Doc."

  "Now, see here—!"

  "You want to argue the question, Doc?" Red Hyle held the bottle poised over his glass, but the bottle was in his left hand. Doc did not want to argue. Nor was it his way to face anything directly. He preferred the oblique. He never expected to have trouble with Red Hyle. He expected to kill him first, but in his own time, when Hyle had something worth killing him for.

  Besides, Red was too good with a gun—quick and dangerous.

  "You seen the tracks," he said, "he's loaded heavy. He's packin' a lot we could use, an' his stock besides. Those are mighty fine mules."

  "I seen a few wagons," Purdy Mantle said, "but none loaded that heavy. I wonder what all he's carryin'?"

  "They're well-off. A body can see that."

  "Uh-huh ... so maybe they figure to buy land. Maybe they figure to buy what all they need. That's why their wagon's so heavy."

  "What d' you mean, Purdy?" Doc asked. "Look at it. What's the heaviest thing you know of?"

  "Gold?" Ike Mantle stared. "You all figure he's carryin' gold?"

  "I said no such thing. On'y that wagon's heavy, mighty heavy."

  "He killed Lenny," Doc muttered. "He killed my boy."

  "Somebody did. Shot right through my hat, too," Ike said. "Lenny would have to be wearin' my hat."

  "How's Booster?" Purdy asked.

  "He'll carry the scars," Doc said. "His nose is broke, an' he lost some teeth. I'd sure like to know what he was hit with. His face is tore up somethin' awful."

  "They was ready for us," Purdy said. "They was settin' waitin'. Who'd figure they'd be all that canny?"

  "I tell you," Doc said, "there was somebody else. You look at the tracks around that camp, Purdy?"

  "For what? We already knew where they was. I'd no call to go scoutin' around."

  "Gold," Ike Mantle said, "supposin' there is gold?"

  Nobody spoke for a few minutes. "You all do what you're of a mind to," Red Hyle said, "I'm follerin'. That there's a woman. I ain't seen anythin' like her since those fancy rich women from up on the hill at Natchez."

  "We lost nothin' here," Doc agreed. "I'm ready to get shut of this place. Leave it for the next outfit, just like we found it."

  Red Hyle got to his feet and walked out. For a moment there was silence, and then Purdy said, "He's really got woman on his mind."

  "Did you see her?" Doc said.

  "I saw her. But I wouldn't get myself killed for her. Not me."

  Purdy Mantle was the last one to leave, finishing off the bottle, then throwing it into a corner where it shattered to bits. He followed the others outside, leaning against the wall and thinking. Lenny Shabbitt was dead, and he was no loss, but it had been passed over that he was wearing Ike's hat. Maybe whoever killed Lenny had wanted to kill Ike ... and there were a lot who would take pleasure in it.

  Purdy looked down at his scuffed boots. He ought to get away from them. He should get shut of them now and go his own way.

  Ike, too. Ike was as bad as the worst of them, because Ike was mean ... downright mean. Brother he might be, but he was a mean, cruel man. He felt no love for his younger brother, nor did Ike feel any for him. They'd been born to the same parents but they were far apart in everything else.

  Now they were going to follow after that tenderfoot and his family. Purdy hitched up his gun. He was better with a gun than any of them, unless it was Red Hyle. He'd often wondered about that.

  He had seen Hyle shoot, and he had seen only one man he thought was as good ... just one. He'd seen Con Vallian down in the Bald Knob country that time, and Con was quick. He was almighty quick at a time when a man was either quick or he was dead.

  Ike came up, leading their horses. "Saddled up for you." He squinted at him. "You draggin' your feet, Purd?"

  "Lazy," Purdy said, "lazy in the sun."

  "You think too much. Thinkin' never got a man any place. You start to study on things and all you get is mixed up."

  "I was thinkin' about Red Hyle."

  Ike shot him a quick look. "Wonderin' was you as slick as him? Don't you try it, Purd. What if you was? You'd get yourself shot up for no good reason. He gives you trouble, just shoot him ... or I will. Don't call him out."

  There were eight of them when they rode out of the settlement bound west. Doc Shabbitt, who thought he was the leader and the brains. Red Hyle, who rode with them but was not one of them, Ike and Purdy Mantle, Johnny Dobbs who was a wanted man somewhere back east, Booster McCutcheon, who was in no shape to ride but had no choice but ride or be left, Boston Pangman, and the Huron.

  Nobody knew whether the Huron was really a Huron or not. Somehow or other he had drifted in with them and somebody called him Huron. He wore white man's clothes and
talked a poor white man's tongue, but he was dark enough to be an Indian. He was a good man in the woods, and could handle a canoe or boat. What else he could do they did not know ... or care.

  The sun was high when they started west, but they were in no hurry. The plains were wide and long. A wagon with four mules and a heavy load does not move very fast, so they'd take their own time. Besides, the deeper into prairie country they were the less chance of their crime being discovered or revealed.

  In camp the firelight flickered. Out upon the prairie the grass was a white sea under the high, pale moon. There was a smell of sun-ripened grass and cooling water. There was a smell of wood-smoke and bacon frying, and beside the fire three people bound westward.

  "It has been three days," Susanna said. "I think he has left us."

  "Well? Why not? What duty has he to us?"

  He had none, of course, yet there was an empty place at coffee-time, and a voice they did not hear in their quiet talking.

  "Do you think the others will come after us?"

  "He thought so," Tom said. "He told me I must listen. That I must always listen."

  Their days had been measured by creeks, some dry, some with a trickle of water, a few running strong and well. Prairie Chicken Creek, Rock Creek, Elm Creek. They had made good time, twenty miles each day, and the turf had been firm even though their wheel-tracks still cut deep.

  "Pa? The mules are sure gaunt. They are not eating tonight ... just standing."

  "They need rest, Tom. We should stop for a day, let them catch up."

  Susanna straightened from the fire, a fork in her hand. "Duncan? Do we dare?"

  "We will have to. We can't escape them, anyway. They can travel further in two days than we can in five if they wish to. It will serve no good purpose to kill our stock. I'd like to get further along, but maybe it is better here. This is a good spring."

  He felt better today for he had killed an antelope, their first fresh meat. They broiled some of it over the fire and ate well.

  "Susanna? I saw some tracks today."

  "His?"

  "No ... unshod ponies. They were Indian tracks, quite a few of them. They were dragging their tent-poles like Indians do."

  Susanna took the first watch. There were only the three of them now, and her husband and her son needed all the rest they could get. At seven o'clock when the dishes were all put away and only the coffee-pot left on the fire, she took her rifle and went out to the edge of camp.

  She had found a place there where some low rocks and brush covered the top of a knoll. She sat down among them and let the darkness close in around her. On her right and below she could see the faint winking eye of the campfire, and the shadow of the once-white wagon-top.

  It was very still. The moon was bright, yet already it had started descending toward the horizon. Long before Duncan succeeded Tom on watch the moon would be gone. Nothing moved out there. At least, nothing she could see. She thought of home and wondered what her sisters were doing now.

  It would not be late back there. Dinner would be almost over unless they had gone out or were entertaining. The lights would be bright along the streets, people would be sitting out in porch-swings and talking, while some of the young people would be gathered around a piano, singing.

  Far off, a coyote howled ... then another. Or was it a wolf?

  Something stirred down below and a shadow moved in front of their fire. She frowned, half-rising. Duncan must be awake ... she knew he never felt easy with her out alone and on watch ... yet, he should be asleep. Tom certainly would be. Tom was a good sleeper, although he awakened early, as Duncan did.

  "Quiet tonight."

  The voice froze her with horror. She had seen nothing, heard nothing.

  She started to rise, but a hand on her shoulder held her down. "No need to get up. I just came out to keep you comp'ny."

  It was Con Vallian.

  "You! Mr. Vallian, you—"

  "Surprised you, huh? Figured I would, an' good for you. Keeps you from gettin' too sure of yourself, an' that can be fatal out here. On'y ones who can be sure of theirselves is the dead."

  "Where have you been?"

  "Missed me, did you? Well, I been circulatin'. Don't do for a man to get in a rut, now, does it? I been seein' some country but I figured you all'd be needin' me."

  "We did miss you, Mr. Vallian. After all, you've been a big help to us."

  "I missed you, too. Missed your coffee, so I went down an' had me a cup."

  "You were in camp?" She was horrified.

  "Yes, ma'am, I surely was. But don't you worry, I didn't wake anybody, and didn't bother 'em. I just had me some coffee and broiled some of that there antelope."

  "You mean you actually cooked some meat? You actually—"

  "Yes'm. I actually. You folks sleep pretty good these nights. Fresh air and weariness will do it ever' time."

  "You ... you could have killed them!"

  "Yes'm. I reckon so. But don't you worry none. Shabbitt ain't that good an Injun. About those others I'm not so sure. Ike Mantle maybe is."

  "I thought you killed him. Wasn't he the one?"

  "A man can make a mistake. I figured there wasn't two hats like that anywhere about, so when I fetched a bullet into that one I reckoned it was Ike. Must have been Doc Shabbitt's son though. He had him a no-account boy about nineteen or twenty."

  "That's too young to die. I am sorry for him."

  "Too young to die? Any time is, when you think on it. Sorry for him? Well, I ain't. He was born mean an' he was raised mean, an' he had his rifle pointed right at your husband's back. He was surely plannin' to kill him, only my bullet stopped him and I guess it jolted him off target. At that distance he wouldn't have missed."

  "Why did you come back?"

  He chuckled. "Oh, I figured I'd like to see how you folks handle Injuns. You're about to meet up with a passel of them."

  "Indians? You mean we'll be attacked?"

  "Maybe, maybe not. You can never tell about Injuns, ma'am, they have notions of their own."

  "When?"

  "They'll come in about sun-up, I guess, to see how wide awake you are. There'll be maybe a dozen or so."

  "What will they do?"

  "Depends on you folks."

  She stood up. "It is time for me to awaken Duncan."

  He got up too. He looked down at her, and she knew he was grinning that exasperating grin. "You sure you want to go in? You right sure?"

  She looked up at him and said quite calmly, "Yes, Mr. Vallian, I am sure."

  She turned away and walked a dozen steps before she turned to look back. "I am sure of something else, too, Mr. Vallian."

  "Yeah? What's that?"

  "I am sure that you are a gentleman, Mr. Vallian."

  Chapter V

  Before the sun appeared the earth was still, and silence lay like a blessing upon the land. No blade stirred in the coolness, nor any bird in the sky, only somewhere not too far off, a meadow lark spoke inquiringly into the morning.

  One arresting finger of smoke lifted thinly to the sky, and where the horizon drew its line across the heavens, a cloud seemed to lie upon the grass, off where the world curved away from them.

  "Put everything away," Vallian advised, "put your goods out of sight. You've got a-plenty of flour and sugar, so plan to spare them some."

  "We've scarcely enough to make it through," Susanna protested.

  "Take out a third," Vallian said, "but don't let it show. An' remember this: don't look scared. Injuns got no respect for a frightened man. You got to make them stand first, then give them something. If they figure you're scared they'll just take it all an' your scalps, too."

  "I don't see anybody," Tom protested. "Ain't nobody in sight for miles."

  "Shut up, boy, an' listen." After a moment he said, "Trouble with city folks. Always talkin'. You never learn anything when you're talkin', boy, only when you're listenin'."

  The clouds flushed pink, and a streak of bright crims
on slashed the sky, reflecting on the grass and giving it a rosy sheen.

  "Shouldn't we be moving?" McKaskel asked, irritably. "Why wait like this? How do you know there is anyone out there?"

  "I know. They're watchin' us." Vallian paused. "You got a Bible?"

  "A Bible. Of course."

  "Get it out, stand there in front of us an' read. Read, an' take in the sky an' all. The Injuns," he added, "may not buy it, but they like a good show."

  Duncan McKaskel went to the wagon and got his Bible. He straightened his coat, stretched his neck out of his collar. He walked out and faced them. "I think this is nonsense," he said, self-consciously. "And I am no minister of the gospel."

  "Right this minute," Con Vallian removed his hat, "you surely are. You're a gospel-shoutin', fire an' brimstone preacher. Now when they come, don't none of you turn a hair. Pay them no mind."

  McKaskel opened the Bible and turned the pages. Suddenly from behind him there were shrill, piping yells. Involuntarily, he started to turn.

  "Read!" Vallian spoke sharply. "Read, if you want to live!"

  Behind him there were pounding hoofs, and the wild, shrill yells. He read, "For the waters of Nimrum shall be desolate: For the hay is withered away, the grass faileth, there is no green thing."

  He paused just a moment and he saw Susanna's face go pale. The horses were thundering down upon them and suddenly they halted, dust drifted forward and over them, and he could smell the hot sweat smell of horses, and he could hear their gasping right behind him, and he continued to read, "Therefore the abundance they have gotten, and that which they have laid up, shall they carry away to the brook of willows."

  Slowly he turned to face the Indians. His heart was pounding, but he said quietly, "Would you care to join us?" he gestured at the ground around bun, and indicated they should be seated, but one Indian, with a strongly-hewn face and an eagle beak of a nose said, "No! We are hungry! You must feed us!" He waved his coup stick in the air.

  Susanna spoke softly, "Duncan? Maybe—"

  "No!" Con Vallian's hat was still in his hand, held near his belt, in his left hand. "We will give you nothing! There is meat out there! The Arapaho are great hunters! Let them hunt!"

 

‹ Prev