Lando s-8

Home > Other > Lando s-8 > Page 13
Lando s-8 Page 13

by Louis L'Amour


  So I walked across to the Bishop. I walked up to him right in front of everybody.

  "Tinhorn," I said, "you better hope those boys of yours don't hurt that kid. If they do, I'll kill you."

  He thought it was big talk, but he made a little move with his head and two husky shoulder-strikers moved up to me. "Caffrey will kill you," the Bishop said, his voice deeper than any I'd ever heard, "but these can rough you up a little first."

  One of them struck at me, and the Tinker's training was instinctive. Grabbing his wrist, I busted him over my back into the dust, and he came down hard. Coming up in a crouch, the other man missed a blow and I saw the glint of brass knuckles on his hand. My left hand grabbed his shirt collar in front and took a sharp twist that set him to gagging and choking. With the other I grabbed his hand, forcing his arm up so that everybody within sight could see those brass knuckles.

  Now, like I've said, I was an uncommon strong man before those years in prison. My fingers wrapped around his hand just above the wrist and began to squeeze, squeezing his fingers right up to a point, then I brought his hand down and let those knuckle dusters fall into the dust. At the same time I slipped my hand up a little further and shut down hard with all my grip.

  He screamed, a hoarse, choking scream. And then I put my thumb against the base of his fingers and my fingers at his wrist and bent it back sharply. Folks standing nearby heard it break.

  Then I walked out to Manuel.

  "You ride it clean, kid," I said. I spoke loud enough so all could hear. "If either of these make a dirty ride, they'll get what he got."

  Somebody cheered, and then the pistol was fired.

  Those horses taken out of there at a dead run, most of them cutting horses and expert at starting from a stand.

  My mule, he was left at the post.

  They just taken off and went away from there, but Manuel was figuring right. He held the mule back, and sure enough, those two riders to right and left crashed together. They had risked what I'd do rather than what the Bishop might do. If Manuel had been in there, he'd have been hurt, and bad.

  Then Manuel let out a shrill whoop and that Bonaparte left out of there like he had some place to go and it was on fire.

  He was two lengths behind before he made his first jump, but I'd never realized the length of his legs before. He had a tremendous stride, and he ran--he ran like no horse I'd ever seen.

  There was no way for me to see the finish. It was a straightaway course, and several of them seemed to be bunched up at the end.

  Suddenly one of the judges, a man on a white horse, came galloping back.

  "That damned mule!" he yelled. "The mule won by half a length!"

  Back at the Mexicans' cabin nobody had much to say. The Mexican folks who owned it stayed out of sight most of the time and Juana stayed with them. I had made a bit of money and Halloran cut me in on what he'd made on the race, as well as giving a bit to Manuel.

  That I did too.

  Those two races had made that boy more money than he and Juana had seen since Miguel died.

  Me, I stretched out on the bed and lay there, resting up for the fight. My stomach felt empty and kind of sick-like, and I began to wonder if I was scared. True enough, I'd whipped Caffrey, but he was no fighter then, just a big, awkward boy, and I might have been lucky. Now he had been out among men, he had proved himself against known fighters, defeating them all, and there's no escaping the worth of experience.

  Between bouts he'd had a plenty of sparring with experienced fighters, and was up to all manner of tricks that only a professional can come by. But I thought of Jem Mace, who'd taught the Tinker. He had been a master boxer, one of the great ones. Never weighing more than one hundred and sixty pounds, he had been the world's champion, defeating men as much as sixty pounds heavier.

  Thinking about it, I dozed off and did not wake up until the Tinker shook me.

  "Move around," he advised. "Get the sleep out of you. Get your blood to circulating."

  O'Flaherty, the Irishman who'd bet on our mule, came to the house. "I've not seen you with the knuckles," he commented, "but a man with sense enough to bet on a mule is a canny one, so I bet my winnings on you."

  The Tinker was carrying a pistol, a rare thing for him, and the Irishman had brought his shotgun. Doc Halloran had bulges under his coat that meant he was wearing two guns, and I slipped mine into my waistband, too.

  We mounted up and started for the ring, but I'd gone no way at all when someone called out to me, and when I turned I saw it was a girl in a handsome carriage. It was Marsha Deckrow, and she was more beautiful than I would have believed anybody could be.

  Pulling up, I removed my hat. "Still the servant's entrance?" I said.

  She showed her dimples. "I was a child then, Orlando. I must have sounded very snippy."

  "You did."

  "You're stern!" She laughed at me. "I'm sorry you were in prison. My father told me about it."

  "I must be going on," I said, though to be honest it was the last thing I wished to do.

  "You're going to fight that awful man. My father won't let me go, even though I promised to sit in the carriage and we needn't be close.

  There's a knoll a little way from the corral, and we could keep the carriage there. But I'll watch. I think I've found a window."

  "It is likely to be brutal," I said, "and he may whip me."

  "Will I see you afterward, Orlando? After all, we're cousins, aren't we? Or something like that?

  Your father married my aunt."

  "Do you see them often?"

  "With your father feeling the way he does about pa?

  I should say not! In fact, we're on our way to Austin now."

  I gathered the reins. The Tinker and Doc were waiting impatiently, and the time was soon. "You tell your pa for me," I said, "that he'd better drop that case. He'd best forget the whole thing.

  He was working for Jonas in the beginning, and when this is over he won't even be doing that."

  Her face hardened. "You're my enemy then?"

  "I'm not anybody's enemy," I said, "but I know murder when I see it done. And betrayal, too."

  The look in her eyes there for a minute--well, it wasn't what you'd rightly call pleasant; but then it was gone and she was all smiles. "After the fight, Orlando? Win or lose? Will you come?

  Pa wouldn't approve, not one bit, but if you'd come to see me ... I'm staying with the Appletons, down at the end of the street. They hadn't room for pa, too, so he won't be there.

  Do come."

  "Well"--she was a mighty pretty girl--

  "I'll see."

  My stomach felt queasy when I dismounted at the corral, for there were a sight of folks sitting atop the corral fence, which had a board nailed on it all the way around so's men could look at stock when buying from the corral.

  Inside, the yard had been sprinkled and then rolled or tamped until it was hard-packed.

  They'd set four posts in the ground and had ropes around them, running through holes in the posts.

  No sooner had I got down than a great yell went up from the crowd, and there was Dun Caffrey getting out of a carriage. He wore a striped sweater, and when he peeled it off, he showed a set of the finest shoulders a man ever did see.

  He was some taller than me, maybe about three inches, and had longer arms. He would weigh better than me, for I was down to two hundred and six, whilst he weighed two hundred and thirty, and carrying no fat.

  Folks crowded around--men in buckboards and spring wagons, men a-horseback and afoot.

  Caffrey was wearing a pair of dark blue tights and some fancy, special-made shoes for boxing or handball. I wore moccasins and black tights--^the last the Tinker rustled up for me.

  "They've got a set of gloves," Doc Halloran said, "and they offer to fight either way, with or without."

  "Take 'em," the Tinker advised. "They protect your hands, and you'll hit even harder because of them. A lot of folks don't realize it, but a man hits
harder with a bandaged hand and a glove than with a bare fist--m compact, better striking surface, and less danger of hurting your hands."

  When we agreed, they brought a pair of gloves over and I shoved my hand down inside.

  These were three-ounce gloves, and when my hand was doubled into a fist it was hard as rock.

  "We fight London Prize Ring rules,"

  Doc explained. "You fight until one man goes down, a knockdown, slip, or throw down, then you rest for one minute, and you toe the mark when you come up for each round, and the fight is to a finish."

  "He knows," the Tinker said, dryly. He looked at me. "I hope you haven't forgotten what I taught you during those months of travel.

  You can use a rolling hip-lock to throw him, and if you get hold of him, pound him until you're stopped."

  Everybody had been taking notice of Caffrey, and when I slipped off my sweater, nobody was looking my way. I was brown as any Indian, and there were the scars of the old whip-cuts on my back and shoulders.

  In spite of the difference in weight between us, I was better muscled and a little broader in the shoulders and quite a bit thicker through the chest.

  Walton was to referee, and he made an announcement that he'd shoot the first man to come through the ropes or the first to try to tear down a post.

  Around that ring those gamblers were gathered. Right off I could see that they'd outsmarted us, and the whole crowd against the ropes except right in my corner were his friends, and the men behind them were, too. My friends, and few enough of them there were, they were cut off, back some distance.

  Suppose a whole rank started to move in on the ring? What would Walton do then?

  Time was called and we walked out to toe the mark, and as soon as my toe touched it, Caffrey hit me. He hit me a straight left to the face, and it landed hard. I sprang at him, punching with both hands, and he moved around me like a cooper around a barrel. He hit me three times in the face without my landing a blow.

  The crowd began to yell, and he came at me again, but this time I ducked my head against his chest and managed to hit him twice, short blows in the belly, before he put a headlock on me and threw me to my knees, ending the round.

  When I walked back to my corner and sat on Halloran's knee, my lip was puffed from a blow, and there was a knot on my cheekbone.

  I'll give it to him. He could punch.

  "Stay close to him," the Tinker whispered.

  "Keep your hands higher and your elbows in. Work on his body when you get the chance."

  When time was called, Caffrey rushed from his corner and began punching with both hands. He hit me several times, almighty hard, but I got my head down against his chest again and hooked both hands hard to the belly. He tried to push me off then, but I stepped in fast and back-heeled him and he went down hard, ending the round.

  As we went on it was nip and tuck, both of us punching hard. He was fast, and he was in good shape, and he moved well. The first six rounds were gone in fourteen minutes, but the seventh round lasted five minutes all by itself.

  He'd pounded me about the head, but I wasn't really hurt. He'd drawn first blood --there was a trickle of it from my lip that had been cut against my teeth. He was unmarked, and the betting had gone up to three to one on Caffrey.

  Opposite us a window had gone up in the second story of a house, and I could see a couple of women there, watching the fight. Another window in that same house was open, too, but nobody watched from it.

  Round eight came up and I went out fast, slipped a left lead for my head and smashed him in the ribs. It taken his wind, and it shook him up. It was my first hard punch of the fight, and I think it surprised him. He backed off, studying me, and I stalked him. I made awkwardly as if to throw my right and he stepped in, hitting hard with his right.

  My left arm was bent at the elbow, first at shoulder level, elbow near the hip, and I'd moved my left shoulder and hip over almost to the center line, while leaving my fist cocked where it was. As Caffrey threw that right, I let go with my left, letting it whip around, thrown by the tension built up by turning my shoulder forward and the weight behind it.

  The blow struck high on his cheekbone and knocked him across the ring into the ropes. Eager hands shoved him back, but I was moving in on him and I struck him again with my left fist, but I was too eager with my right, and missed. He clinched and back-heeled me into the dirt, falling atop me and jerking his knee into my groin.

  Throwing him off, I came up fast and mad, and hurt by that knee. He cocked his fist, and then Walton stepped in and stopped the round.

  Twice after that he drove me into the ropes and once I was hit from outside the ropes, hit hard just above the kidney. I turned to complain and he knocked me down ... a clean knock-down.

  The crowd was mad now. Arguments were starting all about us, and there were several fights going close to the ring, and one back beyond it. Once, wrestling in a clinch, I thought I saw movement at that empty window, and made up my mind to speak to Doc about it.

  It was bloody fighting now. Moving in, I smashed him in the mouth with a right that split his lip and started the blood flowing. In a clinch he said hoarsely, "I'm going to kill you, Sackett!

  Right here in this ring, I'm going to kill you!"

  "I broke your bones once," I replied, "and I'll do it again!"

  Catching his left arm under mine, I threw him off balance and hit him twice in the belly before I let go. We moved together, punching with both hands, and outside the ropes the crowd was shouting and brawling. Nothing could be heard above the din.

  Deliberately, I still pounded away at his body, but his stomach and ribs were like rock. He cut a slit above my eye and knocked me into the ropes, and there someone struck me a stunning blow over the back of the head with something like a blackjack or sandbag.

  Even as I fell, Caffrey rushed at me and struck me twice in the face. I fell forward, and was scarcely conscious as the Tinker and Doc dragged me to my corner. Yet when the bell rang I was on my feet.

  Now he started after me, and, still feeling the effects of the blow over the head, I could not get myself together. My punches were poorly timed and lacked force, and Caffrey rushed at me, pounding away with both hands. Getting in close, I seized him bodily, lifted him clear of the ground, and slammed him down with such force that the wind was knocked from him.

  "The one in the checked suit," Doc whispered, "he's the one who sapped you."

  Glancing across the ring, I saw him there, a broad-faced man with coarse features, who was wearing a black hat.

  Caffrey was wary of me now, and we circled a bit, and I backed him slowly toward the man in the checked suit. That man, I noticed, had his right hand out of sight under his coat. Near the ropes I moved in, feinted, ducked a left, and landed a right under the heart, pushing him back into the ropes. Smashing another blow to the belly, I deliberately pushed him against the ropes so the men crowded there must give way, then I struck hard at his head, but off aim just enough for the blow to miss, which it did.

  It missed him, but it caught the man in the checked suit on his red, bulbous nose and smashed it, sending a shower of blood over him as he fell.

  We slugged in mid-ring then, slugged brutally, taking no time, just punching away. The things that the Tinker had taught me were coming back now.

  I stabbed a straight left to the mouth, then crossed my right to his chin. He hit me with a solid right and I staggered, but as he closed in I clinched, caught his right elbow in my left hand, and my right arm went around his body. Then I turned my hip against him and hurled him heavily to the dirt.

  He was slow getting up, and suddenly I felt better. There was a cut over my eye, a welt on my cheekbone I could scarcely see over, and my lip had been split, but I felt better.

  I had my second wind, and suddenly all the old feeling against the Caffreys was welling up inside me. They had robbed me and enslaved me, they had treated me cruelly when there was no chance to fight back. Now we would see. />
  When time was called I went out fast. I feinted and hit him with a solid right on the jaw.

  His knees buckled, so I moved in fast to catch him before he could fall and bull him into the ropes.

  If he went down he would have rest and might recover. Men tried to push him off the ropes so he could fall, but I held him there and hit him with both hands in the face with all the power I had.

  When he started to fall away from the ropes I caught him with another punch, and then he did fall. Turning back to my corner, my eyes momentarily caught a flash of light.

  Involuntarily I ducked, but there was nothing.

  Glancing at the empty window, I found it still empty.

  The gamblers were pushing hard on the ropes, and Sheriff Walton shouted at them to hold back, but they were pushing as a mass and there was no one he could single out for a shot, and he was not the man to fire blindly into a crowd.

  When we came together again in the center of the ring, I said, "Dun Caffrey, you and your folks robbed me, now I shall have a little of my own back."

  He cursed me, and beat me to the punch with a left that jolted me. There was power in the man.

  He was a fighter--I'll give him that.

  The crowd was shouting wildly, their faces red with fury at me. They had not expected me to last so long, yet here I was, in danger of beating their man.

  Sweat trickled into my eye and the salt stung, and, momentarily blinded, I failed to see the right with which he knocked me into the ropes. Now it was he who held me there, and as he battered at me with both fists, several men pounded the back of my head and my kidneys from beyond the ropes. Had they left it to one man he might have done me serious injury, but so eager were they, and most of them drinking, that they interfered with one another.

  I got my head down against his chest and again the great strength of me helped, for I bulled him away from the ropes and into the center of the ring.

  As we broke apart, each ready for a blow, sunlight flashed again in my eyes--sunlight reflected from a rifle barrel. In the window which until now had seemed empty, a man was aiming a rifle at me.

 

‹ Prev