Guns of the Canyonlands

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Guns of the Canyonlands Page 18

by Ralph Compton


  Tyree walked into the smoking cabin and after a few minutes searching found a large metal box. The steel was scorched and blackened, but the box itself was intact. He carried it out to Boyd and the old man said, “Open it.”

  Tyree opened the box and took out the items one by one, a deed to Boyd’s ranch, a couple of double eagles and a gold medal on a colored ribbon.

  The rancher smiled. “I was given that by old General Winfield Scott after the battle of Contreras in the Mexican war. I’d been with him since Vera Cruz and stood at his side when he took the Mexican surrender at Mexico City on September fourteenth, eighteen and forty-seven.” Boyd looked up at Tyree, shaking his head. “Hell, it seems like just yesterday, but it was sure a long time ago.”

  Boyd’s hand reached to his shirt pocket and took out a stub of pencil. “Bring that deed close to me, Chance. I’m signing this ranch over to you.”

  “Luke, I don’t think—”

  “Don’t argue, boy. I was thinking of doing this for a spell and not just tonight. In fact right after you met that pretty Sally gal. You two will make this a proper ranch, and you’ll have children to bring life to the place.” Boyd scribbled on the deed, and handed it back to Tyree. “There, it’s done. I’ve signed the ranch over to you and it’s yours.”

  Again Tyree opened his mouth to object, but Boyd waved a hand and hushed him into silence. “Now, boy, there’s something you can do for me,” he said. “Chance,” he whispered, his voice hoarse with pain, “I’m burned away from the waist down. Nothing left of my legs but ash. I’m in so much pain I can hardly stand it and it’s getting worse by the minute. There’s no hope for me, but I don’t want to linger like this. I wouldn’t allow an animal to suffer like I’m suffering right now.”

  Boyd again clutched Tyree’s shirt. “Make it a clean shot, son.” His pleading eyes sought those of Tyree’s in the darkness. “Do this much for me, boy. Help an old man.”

  Tyree eased a fallen timber off Boyd’s legs and he was shocked by what he saw. Luke was right—both his limbs were incinerated, burned to a mass of blackened, melted flesh, spikes of white bone showing here and there. Luke Boyd must have been in agony, and so far only the old rancher’s stubborn courage had prevented him from screaming.

  The terrible sight of Boyd’s legs made Tyree’s decision for him. He turned the old man’s head in the direction of the western sky where a million stars shimmered. “Watch the stars, Luke,” he said. “Watch the stars and remember your life. Remember how it was, every single moment of it.”

  The old man nodded and the night sky was reflected in his eyes. His face settled into repose, smiling, a man at peace with himself and his death.

  Tyree thumbed back the hammer of his Colt. “Remember how it was, Luke,” he whispered. “Remember how it was, my friend.” The sound of a gunshot echoed loud through the canyons, then faded away like the beat of a distant drum.

  Tyree laid Luke Boyd to rest at the base of the mesa. He dug the grave deep, and when the old man was covered with earth, he piled the spot high with talus rocks so that it would be seen and be safe from animals. Then he fashioned a cross from a couple of the burned timbers from the cabin and set it up among the rocks.

  Hat in hand, Tyree stood at the graveside for long hours as the moon dropped in the sky and a deeper darkness fell around him. The coyotes sang Luke’s lonely funeral dirge while the breeze sighed and whispered a eulogy to the listening night.

  When the dawn came, Chance Tyree finally turned away from the grave and allowed his grief to be replaced with a savage anger.

  He looked up at the brightening sky, his face a mask of pain and hate, and made a vow . . . to visit a hundred different kinds of hell on the canyon country.

  Chapter 20

  Tyree searched among the ruins of the cabin and found several cans of food. The labels were burned away and he had no idea what the cans contained. But he was lucky. There were beans in the first can he opened, peaches in the second, the contents of both scorched but edible.

  He ate hastily, then swung into the saddle. His first task was to rescue Sally. No matter the odds, he was determined to free the girl and bring her back here—home to his ranch.

  Tyree rode through the remainder of the night, chasing the dawn, and the morning sun was just beginning its climb into the sky when he rode into Crooked Creek and reined up outside the Regal Hotel. A few people were walking briskly along the boardwalks and several cow ponies stood three-legged at the hitching rail of the restaurant, but at this early hour the town was quiet.

  Tyree stepped out of the saddle, yanked his Winchester from the scabbard and levered a round into the chamber. He jumped onto the boardwalk and slammed through the hotel door. The clerk at the desk—a small, round man wearing an eyeshade, muttonchop whiskers bookending a cherubic face—looked up from the ledger he’d been studying, his eyes alarmed.

  Giving the man no chance to talk, Tyree snapped, “Sally Brennan’s room?”

  “Top floor, number twenty-six,” the clerk answered. “But, hey, you’ve got no right to—”

  Tyree didn’t wait to hear the rest. He was already taking the stairs two at a time.

  At the end of the hallway, a couple of men with deputy’s stars pinned to their shirts, shotguns in their laps, were sitting on chairs outside the door. One was Len Dawson, the other a tall, sour looking man Tyree didn’t know. The two immediately sprang to their feet, and Dawson shouted, “Tyree! What the hell are you doing here?”

  “Move back from the door, Dawson,” Tyree said, making his point with his waving rifle. “I’m here for Sally.”

  “The hell you are!” the man with Dawson yelled. He swung the scattergun in Tyree’s direction. Tyree fired, levered the Winchester and fired again. Hit twice, the deputy slammed against the wall, then slid to the floor, a trail of blood smearing the flowered wallpaper behind him.

  Dawson made no attempt to level his shotgun. But he was eyeing Tyree, a hard, angry scowl betraying the fact that he was thinking about making a play.

  “Don’t even try it, Dawson,” Tyree said. “I’m all through talking. From now on I’ll let my guns do all the speechifying for me.”

  Dawson was bucking a stacked deck and he knew it. He let the shotgun remain right where it was, the man sitting still as a marble statue. Tyree stepped up to the deputy, wrenched the gun from his hands, broke it open and removed the loads. “Inside,” he said. “And please, Dawson, give me an excuse to drill you.”

  Wordlessly, his face suddenly gray, the deputy opened the door to Sally’s room and Tyree followed him inside. The girl was sitting up in bed, a bandage around her shoulder, her eyebrows raised in shocked surprise.

  “Chance, I heard the shooting and—”

  “Get dressed, Sally,” Tyree interrupted. “I’m taking you out of here.”

  Sally needed no further encouragement. She was wearing a plain white shift that someone had given her, and she swung out of bed, showing a deal of shapely leg. “You two turn around until I get dressed,” she ordered.

  “You heard what the lady said, Dawson. Turn around,” Tyree said.

  The deputy did as he was told and when Sally was dressed she stepped beside Tyree and said, “I think my horse is at the livery.”

  Tyree shook his head. “No time for that,” he said. “My shots will have attracted a crowd.” He extended an open palm to Dawson. “Key.”

  Dawson dug in his pocket and came up with the room key. “You’ll never get out of Crooked Creek alive,” he said. “You know that, don’t you?”

  It was an empty threat, the last resort of a vexed, angry man and Tyree did not answer. He stripped the deputy of his gun belt, then locked him inside the room. He removed Dawson’s Colt from its holster, filled his pockets with ammunition from the loops, and hung the belt on the door handle. “Take this,” he told Sally, handing her his Winchester. “If you have to, favor your shoulder and shoot from the hip.”

  “Chance,” Sally said, a mild exasperati
on in her voice, “my left shoulder took Darcy’s bullet. I shoot off my right.”

  Tyree grinned. “Shows you how observant I am.”

  The girl followed Tyree downstairs to the lobby of the hotel and the frightened clerk cringed against the wall as Tyree turned and glared at him.

  Tyree crooked a finger in the man’s direction. “You,” he said, “come over here.”

  “Mister, I’ve got a wife and kids,” the clerk whined. “Don’t kill me.”

  “Step out the door and take a look,” Tyree said. “Tell me what you see.”

  “Sure, sure, mister, anything you say.”

  The clerk opened the door, stuck his head outside and hesitated for a few moments. Then he threw the door open wide and ran into the street, hollering, “Murder! Murder!”

  Tyree cursed under his breath and stepped through the door, a gun in each hand. But, as it happened, luck was with him.

  A small crowd of curious townspeople had gathered on the boardwalk opposite the hotel, but neither Tobin nor the Laytham punchers were in sight.

  Tyree smiled grimly to himself. Tobin, Darcy and the rest were probably still out hunting him, leaving Crooked Creek wide-open but for the inept Dawson.

  He didn’t plan on staying around to push his luck, but there was time to get Sally’s pony. He stepped to his horse and swung into the saddle, then helped Sally get up in front of him. Tyree swung the steeldust around and loped toward the livery stable.

  Zeb Pettigrew stepped out of the stable, leading the paint, grinning from ear to ear. “You know I’m a watching man, Tyree, so I saw you ride in to town. I guessed why you were here. Then I heard the shooting and knowed for sure why you were here.” He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. “The young lady’s mare is saddled and ready to go.”

  Tyree nodded his thanks and waited until Sally stepped into the saddle. “Once again, Zeb,” he said, smiling, “thanks for your help. And once again, I’m beholden to you.”

  “No trouble, Tyree,” the old man said. “But it seems like everything I do to help you shortens the play.” He grinned. “But what the hell? It’s not the length of the performance that counts. It’s the excellence of the actors.” He shook his head. “And you two are excellent.”

  “Then stick around for the last act,” Tyree said. “It’s coming soon.”

  The old man lifted a hand. “Hell, I wouldn’t miss that for the world.”

  A cloud of dust roiled around the steeldust and the paint as they stretched their necks and hit the flats at a fast gallop. Behind him Tyree suddenly heard the sharp, spiteful bark of a wheel gun. He turned and saw the little hotel clerk standing in the middle of the street, a raging, arm-waving Dawson beside him. The clerk held a small pepperbox revolver at eye level in his right hand and he fired again and again, his shots flying wild.

  Tyree grinned and shook his head at Sally. “For a married man, that hombre sure likes to live dangerously.”

  Because of Tobin’s posses, Tyree and Sally again kept to the rugged canyonlands well away from Hatch Wash. As they rode, Tyree told the girl about Luke Boyd’s death.

  “So Luther Darcy has another killing to answer for,” Sally said, tears springing into her eyes.

  Tyree nodded, his face grim. “Darcy will answer to me for that one.”

  Just as the sun was setting they rode over a saddleback ridge between the sloped bases of high, twin mesas and then down into a small meadow covered with wildflowers, long streaks of blue columbine, white wild orchids and scarlet monkeyflower.

  “Let’s stop here for a while,” Sally said. “I want to gather some of those.”

  Tyree helped the girl from the saddle and watched as she collected a bunch of the wildflowers, all of them fresh and blooming, watered by underground seeps from the mesas.

  They mounted again and fetched up to Boyd’s ruined cabin as the darkness fell around them and the night birds began to peck at the first stars.

  Sally walked to the old rancher’s grave and laid the flowers on top of the piled rocks, her cheeks wet with tears. After a while she returned to Tyree’s side and looked around her. “I can’t believe he’s gone,” she said. “I keep expecting him to step out of the barn and wave and give me that big grin the way he always did.”

  Tyree nodded. “He was a good man, a fine man, and I’ll miss him.”

  He led the steeldust into the barn and forked the horse some hay, then gathered wood along the creek and built a fire. After that he again foraged in the cabin, finding a few more cans of food and the still intact whiskey jug.

  As he and Sally sat by the fire, they shared a can of meat and some canned tomatoes, then each had a drink from the jug, the strong liquor helping to quiet some of the clamor inside them.

  “How is the shoulder?” Tyree asked.

  The girl shrugged. “Darcy’s bullet just grazed me, but it was enough to knock me off my feet. Well, it was that or shock maybe, because I sure enough fainted.” She lifted a corner of the bandage and looked at her injury in the firelight. “I’ll have a nice little scar there, but the wound itself is healing well.”

  “I’ve got something to show you,” Tyree said.

  The firelight bronzing his face, he took the deed to Boyd’s ranch from his shirt pocket and wordlessly passed it to Sally. The girl read what the old man had written and looked at Tyree in surprise.

  Tyree shrugged. “Luke wanted me to have the place. By rights, it belongs to Lorena. If she cares to claim it, then I’ll hand it back to her.”

  For a few moments, Sally sat in silence. Then she said, “Lorena may not want the place, but Quirt Laytham surely does. And when he and Lorena get married, he can claim it legally through his new wife.”

  “It seems he doesn’t want to wait that long,” Tyree said. “That’s why he had Darcy kill Luke.”

  Sally shook her head. “But, Chance, that just doesn’t make any sense. Why would Laytham murder the father of the woman he intends to wed?” The girl looked at Tyree, red flames dancing in her dark eyes. “Chance, I think someone else has taken cards in this game—the same person who killed Steve Lassiter and then ordered Darcy to murder Luke. There’s another player, a mystery man who wants all the same things Laytham does, especially wealth, and the power that goes with it.”

  “Who?” Tyree asked, skepticism heavy in his voice.

  Sally shook her head. “I don’t know.”

  “Luther Darcy?”

  “Maybe. But Darcy isn’t the kind to settle in one place for long. Whoever killed Steve Lassiter and Luke Boyd wants to put down roots, dig them deep and found a dynasty.”

  “Describes Quirt Laytham to a tee,” Tyree said. “Seems to me your mystery man is no mystery.”

  “No, Chance, it’s not him. It’s someone else, someone who shares all of Laytham’s ambitions.”

  “Do you have a single shred of proof for all this, Sally?” Tyree asked.

  Again the girl shook her head. “No.” She hesitated a few moments, then added, “Just call it woman’s intuition.”

  Tyree laughed. “Well, does your woman’s intuition tell you it’s time we were heading for our blankets?”

  “You’re making fun of me again, aren’t you?” Sally asked, her cheeks reddening.

  “No, no, I’m not.” Tyree smiled. “I’ll think about what you said. But I doubt it will change my mind about Laytham. He was behind the killing of Owen Fowler, and now Steve and Luke. There’s no mystery man, Sally. It’s still only Quirt Laytham.”

  “Think what you want, Chance Tyree,” the girl said, her back stiffening. “But I know I am right.”

  They bedded down in the barn that night, but Tyree stayed awake for a long time, listening to Sally’s gentle breathing beside him. Could she be right about another player? Was he perhaps Tobin’s mysterious “party of the third” who had offered him a thousand dollars to leave the territory?

  In the darkness Tyree shook his head. All the signs pointed to Laytham, no one else. Come morning he planned to
make his first move against the big rancher, to let him know the reckoning was about to start.

  After a while Tyree closed his eyes, lulled to sleep by the echoing cries of the calling coyotes and the warm closeness of the woman lying beside him.

  Tyree and Sally were awake at first light. They shared a can of tomatoes for breakfast, Tyree grieving over the fact of having neither coffee nor tobacco and being fervently wishful for both.

  After they’d eaten, Tyree said, “I plan on moving Laytham’s cows out of Owen Fowler’s canyon this morning. Then I aim to check on Mrs. Lassiter.”

  “I’ll come with you,” Sally said. “I want to see how she’s holding up.”

  “It might be safer if you stay here, Sally,” Tyree said. “Luther Darcy did what he came to do when he shot Luke. I doubt he’ll be back anytime soon.”

  An eyebrow arched high on the girl’s forehead and an amused smile played around her lips. “Chance, think about it. When was the last time you punched cows?”

  Tyree thought the question through and admitted to himself that he’d forgotten just about all he’d ever learned about cowboying over the years. Those skills had left him a long time before, round about the time he’d bought his first Colt, and his knowledge of the ways of cattle was blunted.

  Sally saw the doubt in the young man’s face and she smiled. “I’ve worked cattle all my life, Chance, and did it until recently. Believe me, you’ll need my help to get Laytham’s herd out of the canyon.”

  Tyree saw the logic in Sally’s suggestion and he grinned. “You’re right. Maybe it’s best you come along.”

  Before they left, Tyree fashioned a sign from scraps of pine board he found in the barn. There was some leftover white paint from one of Boyd’s projects and he hurriedly blocked out some words using a discarded brush he’d also discovered.

 

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