The Second Western Megapack

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The Second Western Megapack Page 47

by Various Writers


  The rain slanted down in sheets and the broken plain, thoroughly saturated, held the water in pools or sent it down the steep side of the cliff to feed the turbulent flood which swept along the bottom, foam-flecked and covered with swiftly moving driftwood. Around a bend where the angry water flung itself against the ragged bulwark of rock and flashed away in a gleaming line of foam, a horseman appeared, bending low in the saddle for better protection against the storm. He rode along the edge of the stream on the farther bank, opposite the steep bluff on the northern side, forcing his wounded and jaded horse to keep fetlock deep in the water which swirled and sucked about its legs. He was trying his hardest to hide his trail. Lower down the hard, rocky ground extended to the water’s edge, and if he could delay his pursuers for an hour or so, he felt that, even with his tired horse, he would have more than an even chance.

  But they had gained more than he knew. Suddenly above him on the top of the steep bluff across the torrent a man loomed up against the clouds, peered intently and then waved his sombrero to an unseen companion. A puff of smoke flashed from his shoulder and streaked away, the report of the shot lost in the gale. The fugitive’s horse reared and plunged into the deep water and with its rider was swept rapidly towards the bend, the way they had come.

  “That makes th’ fourth time I’ve missed that coyote!” angrily exclaimed Hopalong as Red Connors joined him.

  The other quickly raised his rifle and fired; and the horse, spilling its rider out of the saddle, floated away tail first. The fugitive, gripping his rifle, bobbed and whirled at the whim of the greedy water as shots struck near him. Making a desperate effort, he staggered up the bank and fell exhausted behind a bowlder.

  “Well, th’ coyote is afoot, anyhow,” said Red, with great satisfaction.

  “Yes; but how are we going to get to him?” asked Hopalong. “We can’t get th’ cayuses down here, an’ we can’t swim that water without them. And if we could, he’d pot us easy.”

  “There’s a way out of it somewhere,” Red replied, disappearing over the edge of the bluff to gamble with Fate.

  “Hey! Come back here, you chump!” cried Hopalong, running forward. “He’ll get you, shore!”

  “That’s a chance I’ve got to take if I get him,” was the reply.

  A puff of smoke sailed from behind the bowlder on the other bank and Hopalong, kneeling for steadier aim, fired and then followed his friend. Red was downstream casting at a rock across the torrent but the wind toyed with the heavy, water-soaked reata as though it were a string. As Hopalong reached his side a piece of driftwood ducked under the water and an angry humming sound died away downstream. As the report reached their ears a jet of water spurted up into Red’s face and he stepped back involuntarily.

  “He’s some shaky,” Hopalong remarked, looking back at the wreath of smoke above the bowlder. “I reckon I must have hit him harder than I thought in Harlan’s. Gee! he’s wild as blazes!” he ejaculated as a bullet hummed high above his head and struck sharply against the rock wall.

  “Yes,” Red replied, coiling the rope. “I was trying to rope that rock over there. If I could anchor to that, th’ current would push us over quick. But it’s too far with this wind blowing.”

  “We can’t do nothing here ’cept get plugged. He’ll be getting steadier as he rests from his fight with th’ water,” Hopalong remarked, and added quickly, “Say, remember that meadow back there a ways? We can make her from there, all right.”

  “Yo’re right; that’s what we’ve got to do. He’s sending ’em nearer every shot—Gee! I could ’most feel th’ wind of that one. An’ blamed if it ain’t stopped raining. Come on.”

  They clambered up the slippery, muddy bank to where they had left their horses, and cantered back over their trail. Minute after minute passed before the cautious skulker among the rocks across the stream could believe in his good fortune. When he at last decided that he was alone again he left his shelter and started away, with slowly weakening stride, over cleanly washed rock where he left no trail.

  It was late in the afternoon before the two irate punchers appeared upon the scene, and their comments, as they hunted slowly over the hard ground, were numerous and bitter. Deciding that it was hopeless in that vicinity, they began casting in great circles on the chance of crossing the trail further back from the river. But they had little faith in their success. As Red remarked, snorting like a horse in his disgust, “I’ll bet four dollars an’ a match he’s swum down th’ river just to have th’ laugh on us.” Red had long since given it up as a bad job, though continuing to search, when a shout from the distant Hopalong sent him forward on a run.

  “Hey, Red!” cried Hopalong, pointing ahead of them. “Look there! Ain’t that a house?”

  “Naw; course not! It’s a—it’s a ship!” Red snorted sarcastically. “What did you think it might be?”

  “G’wan!” retorted his companion. “It’s a mission.”

  “Ah, g’wan yorself! What’s a mission doing up here?” Red snapped.

  “What do you think they do? What do they do anywhere?” hotly rejoined Hopalong, thinking about Johnny. “There! See th’ cross?”

  “Shore enough!”

  “An’ there’s tracks at last—mighty wobbly, but tracks just th’ same. Them rocks couldn’t go on forever. Red, I’ll bet he’s cashed in by this time.”

  “Cashed nothing! Them fellers don’t.”

  “Well, if he’s in that joint we might as well go back home. We won’t get him, not nohow,” declared Hopalong.

  “Huh! You wait an’ see!” replied Red, pugnaciously.

  “Reckon you never run up agin’ a mission real hard,” Hopalong responded, his memory harking back to the time he had disagreed with a convent, and they both meant about the same to him as far as winning out was concerned.

  “Think I’m a fool kid?” snapped Red, aggressively.

  “Well, you ain’t no kid.”

  “You let me do th’ talking; I’ll get him.”

  “All right; an’ I’ll do th’ laughing,” snickered Hopalong, at the door. “Sic ’em, Red!”

  The other boldly stepped into a small vestibule, Hopalong close at his heels. Red hitched his holster and walked heavily into a room at his left. With the exception of a bench, a table, and a small altar, the room was devoid of furnishings, and the effect of these was lost in the dim light from the narrow windows. The peculiar, not unpleasant odor of burning incense and the dim light awakened a latent reverence and awe in Hopalong, and he sneaked off his sombrero, an inexplicable feeling of guilt stealing over him. There were three doors in the walls, deeply shrouded in the dusk of the room, and it was very hard to watch all three at once.…

  Red listened intently and then grinned. “Hear that? They’re playing dominoes in there—come on!”

  “Aw, you chump! ‘Dominee’ means ‘mother’ in Latin, which is what they speaks.”

  “How do you know?”

  “Hanged if I can tell—I’ve heard it somewhere, that’s all.”

  “Well, I don’t care what it means. This is a frame-up so that coyote can get away. I’ll bet they gave him a cayuse an’ started him off while we’ve been losing time in here. I’m going inside an’ ask some questions.”

  Before he could put his plan into execution, Hopalong nudged him and he turned to see his friend staring at one of the doors. There had been no sound, but he would swear that a monk stood gravely regarding them, and he rubbed his eyes. He stepped back suspiciously and then started forward again.

  “Look here, stranger,” he remarked, with quiet emphasis, “we’re after that cow-lifter, an’ we mean to get him. Savvy?”

  The monk did not appear to hear him, so he tried another trick. “Habla española?” he asked, experimentally.

  “You have ridden far?” replied the monk in perfect English.

  “All th’ way from th’ Bend,” Red replied, relieved. “We’re after Jerry Brown. He tried to kill Johnny, judgin’ from th’ track
s.”

  “And if you capture him?”

  “He won’t have no more use for no side pocket shooting.”

  “I see; you will kill him.”

  “Shore’s it’s wet outside.”

  “I’m afraid you are doomed to disappointment.”

  “Ya-as?” asked Red with a rising inflection.

  “You will not want him now,” replied the monk.

  Red laughed sarcastically and Hopalong smiled.

  “There ain’t a-going to be no argument about it. Trot him out,” ordered Red, grimly.

  The monk turned to Hopalong. “Do you, too, want him?”

  Hopalong nodded.

  “My friends, he is safe from your punishment.”

  Red wheeled instantly and ran outside, returning in a few moments, smiling triumphantly. “There are tracks coming in, but there ain’t none going away. He’s here. If you don’t lead us to him we’ll shore have to rummage around an’ poke him out for ourselves: which is it?”

  “You are right—he is here, and he is not here.”

  “We’re waiting,” Red replied, grinning.

  “When I tell you that you will not want him, do you still insist on seeing him?”

  “We’ll see him, an’ we’ll want him, too.”

  As the rain poured down again the sound of approaching horses was heard, and Hopalong ran to the door in time to see Buck Peters swing off his mount and step forward to enter the building. Hopalong stopped him and briefly outlined the situation, begging him to keep the men outside. The monk met his return with a grateful smile and, stepping forward, opened the chapel door, saying, “Follow me.”

  The unpretentious chapel was small and nearly dark, for the usual dimness was increased by the lowering clouds outside. The deep, narrow window openings, fitted with stained glass, ran almost to the rough-hewn rafters supporting the steep-pitched roof, upon which the heavy rain beat again with a sound like that of distant drums. Gusts of rain and the water from the roof beat against the south windows, while the wailing wind played its mournful cadences about the eaves, and the stanch timbers added their creaking notes to swell the dirgelike chorus.

  At the farther end of the room two figures knelt and moved before the white altar, the soft light of flickering candles playing fitfully upon them and glinting from the altar ornaments, while before a rough coffin, which rested upon two pedestals, stood a third, whose rich, sonorous Latin filled the chapel with impressive sadness. “Give eternal rest to them, O Lord,”—the words seeming to become a part of the room. The ineffably sad, haunting melody of the mass whispered back from the roof between the assaults of the enraged wind, while from the altar came the responses in a low Gregorian chant, and through it all the clinking of the censer chains added intermittent notes. Aloft streamed the vapor of the incense, wavering with the air currents, now lost in the deep twilight of the sanctuary, and now faintly revealed by the glow of the candles, perfuming the air with its aromatic odor.

  As the last deep-toned words died away the celebrant moved slowly around the coffin, swinging the censer over it and then, sprinkling the body and making the sign of the cross above its head, solemnly withdrew.

  From the shadows along the side walls other figures silently emerged and grouped around the coffin. Raising it they turned it slowly around and carried it down the dim aisle in measured tread, moving silently as ghosts.

  “He is with God, Who will punish according to his sins,” said a low voice, and Hopalong started, for he had forgotten the presence of the guide. “God be with you, and may you die as he died—repentant and in peace.”

  Buck chafed impatiently before the chapel door leading to a small, well-kept graveyard, wondering what it was that kept quiet for so long a time his two most assertive men, when he had momentarily expected to hear more or less turmoil and confusion.

  C-r-e-a-k! He glanced up, gun in hand and raised as the door swung slowly open. His hand dropped suddenly and he took a short step forward; six black-robed figures shouldering a long box stepped slowly past him, and his nostrils were assailed by the pungent odor of the incense. Behind them came his fighting punchers, humble, awed, reverent, their sombreros in their hands, and their heads bowed.

  “What in blazes!” exclaimed Buck, wonder and surprise struggling for the mastery as the others cantered up.

  “He’s cashed,” Red replied, putting on his sombrero and nodding toward the procession.

  Buck turned like a flash and spoke sharply: “Skinny! Lanky! Follow that glory-outfit, an’ see what’s in that box!”

  Billy Williams grinned at Red. “Yo’re shore pious, Red.”

  “Shut up!” snapped Red, anger glinting in his eyes, and Billy subsided.

  Lanky and Skinny soon returned from accompanying the procession.

  “I had to look twict to be shore it was him. His face was plumb happy, like a baby. But he’s gone, all right,” Lanky reported.

  “All right—he knowed how he’d finish when he began. Now for that dear Mr. Harlan,” Buck replied, vaulting into the saddle. He turned and looked at Hopalong, and his wonder grew. “Hey, you! Yes, you! Come out of that an’ put on yore lid! Straddle leather—we can’t stay here all night.”

  Hopalong started, looked at his sombrero and silently obeyed. As they rode down the trail and around a corner he turned in his saddle and looked back; and then rode on, buried in thought.

  Billy, grinning, turned and playfully punched him in the ribs. “Gettin’ glory, Hoppy?”

  Hopalong raised his head and looked him steadily in the eyes; and Billy, losing his curiosity and the grin at the same instant, looked ahead, whistling softly.

  THE WILD-HORSE HUNTER, by Zane Grey

  I

  Three wild-horse hunters made camp one night beside a little stream in the Sevier Valley, five hundred miles, as a crow flies, from Bostil’s Ford.

  These hunters had a poor outfit, excepting, of course, their horses. They were young men, rangy in build, lean and hard from life in the saddle, bronzed like Indians, still-faced, and keen-eyed. Two of them appeared to be tired out, and lagged at the camp-fire duties. When the meager meal was prepared they sat, cross-legged, before a ragged tarpaulin, eating and drinking in silence.

  The sky in the west was rosy, slowly darkening. The valley floor billowed away, ridged and cut, growing gray and purple and dark. Walls of stone, pink with the last rays of the setting sun, inclosed the valley, stretching away toward a long, low, black mountain range.

  The place was wild, beautiful, open, with something nameless that made the desert different from any other country. It was, perhaps, a loneliness of vast stretches of valley and stone, clear to the eye, even after sunset. That black mountain range, which looked close enough to ride to before dark, was a hundred miles distant.

  The shades of night fell swiftly, and it was dark by the time the hunters finished the meal. Then the camp fire had burned low. One of the three dragged branches of dead cedars and replenished the fire. Quickly it flared up, with the white flame and crackle characteristic of dry cedar. The night wind had risen, moaning through the gnarled, stunted cedars near by, and it blew the fragrant wood smoke into the faces of the two hunters, who seemed too tired to move.

  “I reckon a pipe would help me make up my mind,” said one.

  “Wal, Bill,” replied the other, dryly, “your mind’s made up, else you’d not say smoke.”

  “Why?”

  “Because there ain’t three pipefuls of thet precious tobacco left.”

  “Thet’s one apiece, then.… Lin, come an’ smoke the last pipe with us.”

  The tallest of the three, he who had brought the firewood, stood in the bright light of the blaze. He looked the born rider, light, lithe, powerful.

  “Sure, I’ll smoke,” he replied.

  Then, presently, he accepted the pipe tendered him, and, sitting down beside the fire, he composed himself to the enjoyment which his companions evidently considered worthy of a decision they had reac
hed.

  “So this smokin’ means you both want to turn back?” queried Lin, his sharp gaze glancing darkly bright in the glow of the fire.

  “Yep, we’ll turn back. An’, Gee! the relief I feel!” replied one.

  “We’ve been long comin’ to it, Lin, an’ thet was for your sake,” replied the other.

  Lin slowly pulled at his pipe and blew out the smoke as if reluctant to part with it. “Let’s go on,” he said, quietly.

  “No. I’ve had all I want of chasin’ thet wild stallion,” returned Bill, shortly.

  The other spread wide his hands and bent an expostulating look upon the one called Lin. “We’re two hundred miles out,” he said. “There’s only a little flour left in the bag. No coffee! Only a little salt! All the hosses except your big Nagger are played out. We’re already in strange country. An’ you know what we’ve heerd of this an’ all to the south. It’s all cañons, an’ somewheres down there is thet awful cañon none of our people ever seen. But we’ve heerd of it. An awful cut-up country.”

  He finished with a conviction that no one could say a word against the common sense of his argument. Lin was silent, as if impressed.

  Bill raised a strong, lean, brown hand in a forcible gesture. “We can’t ketch Wildfire!”

  That seemed to him, evidently, a more convincing argument than his comrade’s.

  “Bill is sure right, if I’m wrong, which I ain’t,” went on the other. “Lin, we’ve trailed thet wild stallion for six weeks. Thet’s the longest chase he ever had. He’s left his old range. He’s cut out his band, an’ left them, one by one. We’ve tried every trick we know on him. An’ he’s too smart for us. There’s a hoss! Why, Lin, we’re all but gone to the dogs chasin’ Wildfire. An’ now I’m done, an’ I’m glad of it.”

  There was another short silence, which presently Bill opened his lips to break.

  “Lin, it makes me sick to quit. I ain’t denyin’ thet for a long time I’ve had hopes of ketchin’ Wildfire. He’s the grandest hoss I ever laid eyes on. I reckon no man, onless he was an Arab, ever seen as good a one. But now thet’s neither here nor there.… We’ve got to hit the back trail.”

 

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