by Zane Grey
Sprall, a wiry little desperado, as poison as a desert viper, leered upon Leighton and Latch.
“Wal, what I want is rum, an’ I ain’t carin’ a hell of a lot how I git it.”
Waldron, a self-confessed bank defaulter and fugitive from New York, ran true to the character his weak face expressed. “It’s between you and Latch.”
Mandrove was a Rebel deserter, a sallow sandy-mustached young man with shifty gaze.
“I’m on Leighton’s side,” he said.
Latch expected a reluctant admission from Creik, who had been in his father’s employ on the plantations. He was a slave-driver, and in other ways than his huge bulk looked the man who could fulfill such position.
“Whisky,” was his trenchant reply.
This left one of the supporters Leighton had named, and surely the most important. A gunman from the Rio Grande country, he answered to the name “Texas” and looked as hard as that wild and notorious southern border.
“Wal, I’d take a shot at my own grandad if he kept me thirsty any longer than this,” was his reply.
“Thanks for your prompt declarations, men,” rejoined Latch, constrainedly. “You can saddle up and get out of heah.”
“Stephen, I know where you hid that liquor,” spoke up Leighton, a dark flush crossing his face.
“Yes, and by God you’ll keep your mouth shut aboot it,” flashed Latch, tensely.
The glances of these kinsmen clinched then and that seemed the crucial moment. Latch knew himself, which evidently was more than Leighton knew, for he wavered under a stronger force.
“I didn’t say that I’d give it away,” went on Leighton, “but I’m good and sore.”
“Young fellar, let me have a word,” spoke up Old Man Keetch, in deep persuasive voice. “I’ve been on this hyar border for twenty years. I’ve seen a heap of men come an’ go. I’ve been in all the tough ootfits from the Brazos to the Platte. An’ them thet fought among themselves never lasted long. Shore it’s no man’s bizness what you want to do with yore own life. But I say there ain’t no sense throwin’ it away. An’ if you-all git drunk an’ git the redskins drunk, why, hell itself would be a church meetin’ to what this hyar ootfit would become. … The boss has a cool haid an’ I say we-all ought to listen to him.”
“Hell! We’re listening. What else is there to do, cooped up heah in this hole? No drink, no money to gamble! I’m sick of it,” replied Leighton, disgustedly. “I want action and I don’t care a damn what kind.”
“Leighton, you can get any kind of action you want,” spoke up the latest acquisition to the band.
This individual, a stripling of a boy still in his teens, had followed Latch out of Fort Dodge a few weeks previously and without question or explanation, except to say that his name was Lester Cornwall, he had attached himself to the chief. Later Latch recalled that he had seen the boy in one of the gambling-hells. His face was as fair as a girl’s, his eyes were blue as blue ice, his hair shining between gold and silver. And beautiful as a beautiful girl he would have been but for his expression of supreme cruelty. He might have been a son of the god of evil.
“What?” bellowed Leighton, like a bull about to charge.
Cornwall rose with a single action, his right hand sliding significantly inside his vest. The firelight glinted from his pale eyes.
“Guns or fists,” he drawled, with the accent of a Carolinian.
Leighton leaped up with a curse, tearing at his weapon. Latch sat closest, but it was Keetch who grasped Leighton’s arm and held on until another of the men pushed him down.
“What’d I jest tell you, man?” queried Keetch, testily. “Hyar you air provin’ the very thing I said.”
“I won’t have that white-face boy———”
“Wal, some one had to call you,” interrupted Keetch, coldly. “An’ it’s shore plain to us if not to you.”
Latch for a moment, in the leap of passion, had hoped Leighton would draw on the boy and get shot for his temper. Then he sharply called both the belligerents to order. Leighton vouchsafed no reply, but relaxed and sat back against the log.
“Colonel, I reckon I’m not the only one who’s tired of Leighton’s gab,” coolly responded the youth, and turned his back to step toward the fire.
Latch suffered a twinge at the use of the title given him in private life, but which had been denied him at the advent of war. This young fellow had known him or heard of him. Latch sensed a strange loyalty here, as well as a remarkable indifference to life. It moved Latch as nothing else had.
“Listen, men,” he began, with eloquent passion, “Keetch put it right. If we fight any more among ourselves we are doomed. Let us fight for each other and not with each other. I guarantee the fortune of any and all of you who stick by me. But my word must be law. We have had no discipline, no purpose, no plan, no execution. We’ve been a gang of border ruffians. My aim is to organize the greatest band ever known on the frontier. And we’ll all be rich.”
“Stephen, you talk well,” spoke up Leighton, in curious scorn. “But you never get anywhere. What’s this wonderful plan that will gain us a fortune?”
“We will wage an organized war on the caravans crossing the plains,” declared the leader, grimly. “Both the wagon trains headed west with government supplies, gold, munitions, merchandise, and the wagon trains returning with the rich furs of the trappers. I have won over Satana to this deal. He is a crafty Indian. He sees the bigness of the idea. He controls five hundred Kiowas, half of whom are with us heah.”
“Wal, it’s a great idea,” interposed Old Man Keetch. “An’ don’t you Southerners overlook thet nine oot of ten caravans air Yankees.”
“Yes, we will aid the Confederacy that has outlawed us while reaping our harvest,” went on Latch, bitterly.
“What’s your plan?” queried Leighton, stirred deeply.
“Listen. Few caravans from now on will have an escort of soldiers. The forts have sent all the soldiers they could spare into the war. Those caravans who do not band together in numbers for protection will be easy picking. We shall choose only small caravans, never over fifty wagons. We shall use our rum to inflame the Kiowas and send them against the damned Yankee freighters. We shall set Satana to kill every last man—and woman, too—of every caravan we attack. It will not be our way to stampede oxen and horses, or to burn wagons. We will make off with every single vestige of a caravan, so that it will simply vanish from the plains. Lost wagon trains!… That’s all. We can never be found heah, at least not by white men. Satana says we can drive the wagons right out on the high wall below heah and dump them over, where they will never be found. The Indians will take the stock. That will be their pay. Which leaves us the contents of the wagons. Last month one train left Independence with a hundred thousand dollars in gold alone. We could afford to work slowly and carefully for such treasure as that. But any wagon train will yield much in supplies and money…. That’s my plan, Lee, in the rough. The details can be worked out later. But I must have a united band and keep strict control…. Now you and all can speak up.”
“I’m for it, Steve,” replied Leighton, warmly.
“Daid men tell no tales, huh?” mused Keetch. “So thet’s your idee. It’s big. But I don’t like the complete massacre.”
“Nor I. We might attack a wagon train that had women and children…. No matter! The Kiowas will do the dirty work. We needn’t see it. But for us to make out strong while the South and North are at war we must follow that plan and stick to it—I’ll call the roll. Answer yes or no!”
Among the group that Leighton had designated as being of a mind with him the only one to answer Latch in the negative was Waldron, the fugitive from the north.
“What is against your principles as a man doesn’t concern me,” added Latch, curtly. “Either you go in with us or quit the band. Choose.”
“I have no choice,” rejoined Waldron, gloomily, as if he indeed saw death near at hand. “I’ll abide by your rule.”
Black Hand and Nigger Jack, outlaws who had found in Latch’s band a haven of refuge, were loud and brief in their acceptance. Lone Wolf, a Texas cowboy of unknown past, dropped his lean tanned face and let silence be his answer. Augustine, the Mexican vaquero, spoke softly in his own tongue, “Si, senor.” Old Man Keetch parleyed with the chief on the issue of possible murder of women and children. “Cain’t we git around thet? It shore goes ag’in the grain. Lots of them caravans have only men.” Latch had thought that out, to realize the impossibility of learning whether or not a wagon train had women. Even the freighters always took some pioneers along with them.
“Keetch, we’ve got to shut our eyes to that,” concluded Latch.
“All right, I weaken. But I’ll say one word. In the end thet will destroy us.”
“How aboot you, Cornwall?” queried Latch of the latest and youngest acquisition to his band.
“Whatever you say, Colonel,” returned the youth, nonchalantly, his clean pure profile in dark relief against the firelight. Again Latch was struck by the boy’s lack of feeling. Fight, robbery, blood, murder, death—these meant nothing to him. Yet he had appeared to be a quiet, intelligent, dreamy young man. Latch awoke with a start from a train of thought he must banish forever.
“It’s settled. Latch’s band,” he said, forcefully, expelling a deep breath. No mind could conceive just what havoc had its inception at that moment.
“Thirteen!” ejaculated Keetch. “How aboot new members? Some of us will git killed. An’ in the very nature of our work on this frontier other men will gravitate to us.”
“Sufficient to the day. The smaller our band the more profits to each. I don’t look favorably on drifters throwing in with us. We will keep this den secret.”
“Wal, thet’s sense. But it’ll not be easy,” went on Keetch, thoughtfully. “I’ve an idee, Latch. You remember, down below, a day’s ride, where this canyon opens out on the prairie. There’s the wonderfulest valley I ever seen. It’ll be settled by pioneers some day. We might locate there, range stock an’ cattle, make a blind of ranchin’.”
“That is a good idea,” agreed Latch. “But isn’t it too close to this hiding-place?”
“Close! …Ain’t it the hardest day’s ride you ever took in yore life? I heerd you say so. It might as wal be a hundred miles as forty. An’ rough! I never seen the beat of thet trail. Sand washes thet leave no tracks, water over hard rock bottom for miles, an’ then a jumble of stones not even an Apache couldn’t trail us over. No, Latch, we needn’t fear bein’ tracked in hyar, or even as far as thet Paso Diablo, as Augustine called it.”
“Pass of the devil! Very well, it is named,” replied Latch. “We’ll think all around your idea of ranching the valley below. Later that land will be valuable.”
“Wal, it’s the finest grazin’ an’ plantin’ field on the west slope of the plains.”
“Field? You call it a field?”
“Shore. There’s a hundred thousand acres level as a floor. An’ a million more in pasture an’ timber. Buffalo land in there on the way north an’ south. It was a favorite huntin’-ground for Cheyennes an’ Arapahoes until Satana drove them out.”
“Latch’s Field,” rejoined the chief, dreamily. “I thought I had done with land—except six feet to sleep in some day, sooner or later.”
“Wal, let’s mill over thet idee,” said Keetch. “Reckon I’ve always had a hankerin’ to locate somewhere an’ settle down to farmin’. After the war, if it ever ends, there’ll be a spillin’ of people all over the west. Shore the South will be ruined, win or lose.”
“Aye,” echoed Latch, with a haunting bitterness.
“Uggh!” interrupted the Kiowa chief, lifting his head. Three savages had stepped silently up to the edge of the circle. One spoke in guttural tones. Light thud of hoofs came from under the trees. Then lean wild riders entered the light of the camp fires. Wet bronze bodies glistened in the light.
Satana only, of the Kiowas, presented a stoical and unimpressed manner. All the savages round that fire, and those from other circles, came crowding forward as the three scouts faced their chief. Latch had seen a good deal of Indians during his short sojourn on the frontier, but the stride, the mien, the posture of these scouts scarcely required words to express information of most significant and tremendous import for all present.
The spokesman of the trio was known to Latch—a young brave named Hawk Eye, a matchless tracker and rider. He it was who had sighted the Arapahoes in their effort to ambush the Kiowas. His wet braids of raven hair hung over his brown shoulders; he rested his carbine in the hollow of his left elbow; his eyes shone with piercing intensity.
“Keetch, have a care to get all he says,” spoke up Latch.
“Wal, he’s shore bustin’ with news. An’ I reckon I wasn’t captive among the Kiowas for nothin’,” returned Keetch.
The lean warrior spoke as if rendering an oration, making slow and elaborate gestures which had to do with places and distances. Latch thrilled to their meaning. He recalled his boyhood, when he had developed a lust for wild tales of savage warfare on the Texas frontiers. He was now about to inaugurate a newer and bloodier warfare, that united the crafty intelligence of the white man and the ferocity of the savage. Would youngsters of the future ever read his name—Stephen Latch—in the history of the strange disappearance of wagon trains from the plains? The idea appalled him. Here face to face with concrete results of his deliberate plans he suffered his first remorse. Bitter, ruined, vengeful Rebel that he was, he had a glimpse of the horror of his machinations.
At the end of Hawk Eye’s speech Satana let out a loud “Uggh!” which needed no translation.
“Latch,” interposed Keetch, sonorously, “thar’s a heap of that redskin’s harangue I couldn’t savvy. But the gist of it is thet a train of fifty-three wagons without soldiers left Fort Dodge three days ago, headed for the Cimarron Crossin’ an’ the Dry Trail to Fort Union.”
“Ah!… What’s the Dry Trail?” panted Latch.
“It’s a cut-off of two hundred an’ fifty miles. I’ve been over it a few times. Seldom traveled. Only old freighters an’ plainsmen ever tackle the Dry Trail. Water off the trail an’ hard to find. Feed scarce. Buffalo chips for camp fires. Been some bad fights along thet road. Point of Rocks a favorite place for redskins to ambush freighters.”
“How far?” went on Latch, moistening his lips.
“Two days’ hard ridin’.”
“Would that place us near this Point of Rocks?” queried Latch, his voice gathering strength. Of what avail fear, vacillation? The die was cast.
“No. We’d strike the trail this side of old Camp Nichols, an abandoned army post. The Cimarron runs along between Colorado an’ New Mexico. Wildest kind of country… Looks like this deal was made to order.”
Latch turned to address Satana: “Chief, we go daylight.”
“Good!” replied the Kiowa, his dark face flashing as he got up.
“We have heap big powwow tomorrow,” concluded Latch. “Talk how do fight.”
“Uggh. White chief give rum?”
“Yes. Plenty drink.”
Whereupon Satana jabbered to his Indians, and they all trooped away from Latch’s band toward their own camp fires.
“My God! I believe they’re goin’ to dance,” ejaculated Keetch.
“Wal, good-by to sleep,” growled some one.
“Would you sleep, anyhow?” queried Latch, as if addressing himself.
“Reckon I’ll have some nightmares after the bloody deal is over—if—” replied Keetch, with a gruff laugh. “Hell! We can git used to anythin’… Latch, how’re we goin’ to run this fight?”
“I want time to think.”
“Thet ain’t a bad idee for all of us—an’ mebbe Mandrove hyar can offer up a little prayer, like the redskins do. Haw! Haw!”
“Keetch, are you crazy?” demanded Latch, sharply.
“Me? Nope. Reckon I’m the level-haidest of this gang. Mebbe you didn�
�t know Mandrove was a preacher before he turned outlaw?”
“I did not. Is that a fact, Mandrove?”
The Rebel deserter nodded gloomily. Then he spoke:
“I was forced into the army.”
“Didn’t you want to fight?”
“Killing was against my religion.”
“So that’s it. You told me you had deserted…to join Latch’s band! My God, man, but you made a bad choice! You’ll have to fight now. But I would not hold you to your word.”
“I am in the same boat with you, Latch,” he retorted, significantly. “And already a—a murderer.”
“Misery loves company! If you failed as a preacher and a soldier, let us hope you succeed as a desperado.”
Coarse mirth followed this crisp cold speech of the leader.
“Men, this is where we wipe out the past, those of us who have any to remember,” declared Latch. “Honest lives have been denied us. And we have to live out our lives whatever they must be. But let’s not be a common, thieving, treacherous gang. United we stand! And when the war is over——”
“Be rich an’ can settle down,” interrupted Keetch, derisively, as the leader hesitated. “Latch, you’re shore a new kind of border outlaw to me. But I’ll be damned if I don’t like you. An’ I ain’t sayin’ what you plan is impossible. It’s worth tryin’!… But let’s figger on things close to hand.”
“You’re right—but I want time to think. I’ve worked it out only this far. We’ll ride down to this Dry Trail. Keetch, you can choose the place where we will attack the wagon train. We’il send out scouts to locate it. Then when all is aboot ready we’ll deal out rum to the Kiowas. Just enough to inflame them!”
“Don’t forget a few drinks to ourselves,” said Leighton, dryly.
“I second thet motion,” declared Keetch.
“Carried,” rejoined Latch, in a hard tone. “We’ll be up at dawn. Lee, as soon as it’s light enough to see we’ll take two men with a pack-horse and get the rum. Remember, all, that the success of our venture depends on our keeping those kegs of rum intact until the hour.”