Standing in the door, she said, without looking down at the man in the tipped-back chair, “Any message, Jaime?”
The Yaqui gunman glanced up. “No, senorita, there is none. He has been seen this day near Monument Rock. You have seen the map.”
Nita Howard relaxed. “Yes, I know. As long as he is well, we had best leave him alone.”
“He is loyal. A long time ago Markham, he befriended the senor when he was wounded and in danger. The senor does not forget. So he comes here. And you come here; so this means I do, too.” Brigo shrugged. “We are all loyal to one another, but for now you must trust that our friend knows what he is doing.”
The door opened suddenly and Frank Mailer stepped into the room; behind him were Kane Geslin and Sam Starr with another man known as Socorro. Mailer’s eyes brightened with satisfaction when he saw Nita and he turned abruptly and walked toward her. How huge he was! Could anything ever stop this man if he became angered?
Nita watched him come, her mind coolly accepting the danger but not disturbed by it. Her father had died long ago and left her the doubtful legacy of a tough saloon on the Rio Grande border. She had directed its fortunes herself, with Brigo at her side, he who loved her like his own sister, and all because of her father’s friendship to him.
Mailer stopped before her, his hard eyes surveying Nita with appreciation. “You’re all woman, Nita!” he said. “All woman! Just the kind I’ve been lookin’ for!”
She did not smile. “It is said around town that you are to marry Lona Markham.”
Mailer was irritated; there was no reason to think of Lona now and he disliked the subject being brought up. “Come on!” he said impatiently. “I’ll buy a drink!”
“Good!” she said smoothly. Lifting her eyes, she glanced over at the bartender. “Cain”-the big bartender glanced up sharply-“the gentleman is buying a drink.” Her eyes iturned to Mailer. “You meant you were buying for the ‘house, did you not?”
Crimson started to go up Mailer’s neck. He had meant nothing of the kind, yet he’d been neatly trapped and he had the feeling that he would appear cheap if he backed out. “Sure,” he said grudgingly, “for the house! Now come on.” He reached for her arm. “You drink with me.”
“Sorry, I do not drink. Cain will serve you.” She turned and stepped through the door, closing it behind her. Frank Mailer’s eyes grew ugly. He lunged toward the door at the end of the bar.
“Senor.” Brigo was on his feet. “The senorita is ver’ tired tonight. You understand?”
Mailer glared at Brigo, but the Yaqui’s flat dark face was expressionless. Mailer turned on his heel and walked to the bar in baffled fury. The big bartender finished pouring the drinks, then looked over at Mailer. “That’ll be thirty bucks,” he said flatly. His jaws set, Mailer paid for the drinks.
Geslin was in a game with several others. One of them was a red-haired puncher, stocky and tough looking. Mailer dropped into an empty chair and bought chips. At the end of the third hand the redheaded puncher looked up at him. “Mailer, don’t you ramrod that Blue Hill spread? I’m huntin’ for work.”
Frank Mailer’s eyes slanted to the redhead. He was a tough, capable-looking man with hard, steady eyes. He packed his gun low. “You been anywhere I might’ve heard about?”
“I rode for Pierce an’ for Goodnight.”
“Then I can use you, all right.” With the riding he planned to do with Geslin and the others, he would need a few good hands. Also, unless his guess was altogether wrong, this man had ridden the owl hoot himself. “Texas man, hey?”
“Big Bend.”
“Know Wes Hardin?” Mailer asked. “I hear he’s fast.”
“Plenty, an’ with both hands. Maybe as fast as Kilkenny.”
“Kilkenny?” Geslin turned his white eyes toward the redhead. “You say he’s faster than Hardin? Did you ever see Hardin?”
“Uh-huh.” Rusty Gates picked up his cards. “I seen Kilkenny, too.”
All eyes were on him now. Men who had seen Kilkenny to know him were few and far between. The strange drifting gunfighter had a habit of appearing under various names and nobody ever really knew who he was until suddenly there was a blaze of guns and then he was riding out of town.
“What’s he like?” Mailer asked.
“Fast.”
“I mean, what’s he look like?”
“Tall, black hair, green eyes that look right through you when he’s riled up. Quiet feller, friendly enough mostly.”
“Is it true what they say? That he’s killed forty or fifty men?”
Gates shrugged. “Doubt it. A friend of his told me it was no more than eighteen. An’ he might have been exaggeratin’.”
Hours later, when the game had broken up, Rusty Gates crossed to the bar for one last drink. The others had started back to the ranch and he was to come out the following day. He accepted his drink, and Cain grinned at him and shoved his money back.
“I got the job,” Gates said.
“Good!” Cain nodded emphatically. “I’ll tell the boss.”
Bright sunlight lay across the Blue Hill when Lona left the house the following morning. Frank Mailer had gone out early, and her father was fussing over some accounts in his office. Yet the night had neither lessened her curiosity nor changed her mood, and she started for the corral to catch up a horse, believing the hands were all gone. The ranch lay between two peaks with its back to the low bench where Lona had seen the Black Rider on the previous night.
These peaks lifted five hundred feet or so above the ranch house, and it was from one of them that the ranch had taken its name. The ranch house faced northwest, and off to the right, also running toward the northwest, lay the Old Mormon Trail to Utah. Beyond the trail the cliffs lifted high, and at one point a crown of rock reached out to need no more than a half mile to join the twin peaks at Blue Hill. She had reached the corral when she heard a boot scuff stones and turned to face a strange, redheaded puncher who grinned at her in a friendly fashion.
“Can I help, ma’am? I’m Rusty Gates, a new hand.”
“Oh, would you? I was going to saddle my horse. The black mare.”
Gates nodded. “I been studyin’ that mare, ma’am. She’s sure all horse.”
He shook out a loop and caught the black. As the rope settled, the mare stood still, and when she saw Lona she even walked toward the gate. Rusty led the horse outside and glanced at Lona. She was very young, very pretty, and had a trim, neat figure, auburn hair, and gray eyes.
She caught his glance and he grinned. “Your hair’s ‘most as red as mine, ma’am,” he said. “I reckon that makes us partners.” There was something so friendly in his manner that she warmed to him instantly. On impulse, she confided in him.
“Rusty,” she said, “don’t you tell a soul what I’m going to tell you, but I’m going to see the Black Rider!”
Rusty gave her a sidelong, cautious glance. “To see him? How do you figure to do that?”
“I’m going to ride out and look along the ridges for him, then if I see him, I’ll leave it up to Zusa to do the rest. She’ll run him down if anything can.”
Gates was silent. After a while he asked, “You ever see the Rider?”
“I saw him last night, right back on the bench in the rain. I waved to him, and he waved back! Isn’t it exciting?” She expected him to disapprove or to caution her, but strangely, he did not.
He merely nodded, then said, “Ma’am, if I wanted to see that Black Rider, you know what I’d do? I’d head across the valley for Monument Rock, an’ then if I saw him, I wouldn’t take after him none at all. I’d just sit still an’ wait.”
“Wait?” Lena’s eyes widened doubtfully. “You mean he might come up to me?”
Rusty chuckled. “Ma’am, they do say that the Rider’s a ghost, but flesh and blood or ghost, if anything that is male or was male saw you settin’ a horse waitin’ for him, he’d sure come a-runnin’!”
She laughed. “Rusty, you’re just
like all the cowhands! Full of the old blarney!”
“Sure I am. But, ma’am”-his voice dropped a note lower and the look in his eyes was not a teasing look- “you do what I say an’ see if it don’t work. But,” he added, “don’t you ever tell anybody on this ranch I suggested it. Don’t you tell.”
“Thanks, Rusty. I won’t.” She turned to go and he caught her bridle rein.
“Ma’am,” he said, “before you go … who’s your best friend on this ranch? I mean, ma’am, somebody who really loves you.” Surprised, she looked down at him, but he was in dead earnest. The question brought her up short, too, for it made her wonder. Who were her friends? Did she have any? Frank? She shuddered slightly. Her father? For a long time she hesitated. He had never been close to her, never since she returned from school. He had been strict and stern, had given her what she wanted, but allowed her little freedom. She realized suddenly that her father was almost a stranger to her. “I… I guess I haven’t many friends, Rusty,” she said, in a small voice. “I guess … Dave, the cook, and Gordon.”
Gates relaxed his grip. “Well, ma’am,” he said, his voice thick, “I reckon you can count on another friend now. You can count on me. If ever you need a friend, I’d admire to have you call on me.” He turned away, then stopped and turned, glancing up out of his bright blue eyes. “Maybe you’ve got more friends than you realize, ma’am.”
Lona turned the mare up the trail to the bench, and drawing up, she looked carefully around. There were no tracks! A curious little thrill of fear went through her. Was it possible the stories were true? Had it been a ghost who waved at her? The rain could have wiped them out, of course, and there was much rock.
She rode on, cutting diagonally across toward the Old Mormon Trail, which would make for easier riding until she had to leave the trail and ride across the rough grass country toward the high cliffs at Monument Rock. North and east of her, the cliffs made a solid barrier that seemed to cut off the world from this valley, cliffs from four hundred to nine hundred feet high, a dark barrier of dull red now, with the sun just showing above them.
Yet that barrier was not as solid as it appeared, for there were a score of places where a horseman might find a way through, and there were, almost due east of the ranch, three canyons that branched like three spread fingers from a given point. The only one she knew was Salt Creek Wash, and only the first half mile of that.
Her father had never liked her to ride up into those rugged mountains alone. It was early spring, yet the air was warm and vibrant, clear as only desert air can be. The black mare felt good, and wanted to go, but Lona held her in, scanning the country ahead and around her, hoping to see the Black Rider. She had been wrong to come in the morning, especially when it was clear, for he was never seen but at dusk or in the rain.
Was there method in that? So that he would be impossible to follow for long? Dust arose from her horse’s hooves and she rode on until the cliffs began to rise above her and the sun was not yet high enough to show above their serrated rim.
She reined in and looked up at their high battlement crest, then let her eye travel along it, but she saw no horseman, nothing but the rock itself. What she had expected, she did not know. If she had expected her presence to bring the Black Rider suddenly springing from the solid rock, she was mistaken. It was still here, and lonely. She had stopped with Zusa headed north, so she started on, walking her along the low slope that ended in the cliffs. Ahead of her she knew the cliffs took a bend eastward and through the gap flowed the occasional waters of Salt Creek, but there was, she knew, another wash beside Monument Rock, so she followed along and entered a narrow opening that had rock walls lifting six hundred feet and more on either side of her.
It was shadowy and cool and so still as to be almost unbelievable. She rode on, the canyon echoing to her horse’s hooves. She drew up in a sort of amphitheater, the dark pinons clustering against the wall, and climbing it wherever a faint ledge gave precarious root hold. It was still here, and she drew up, her eyes wide and every sense alert. Even Zusa was on edge, for the mare’s sensitive nostrils expanded and her eyes were wide and curious. No sound disturbed the still afternoon. From the stillness she might have been sitting in a mighty cathedral, yet there was no cathedral so splendid or so tall as this, no man-made temple as grand or magnificent.
And then Zusa’s muscles twitched, and turning her head, Lona Markham looked straight into the eyes of the Black Rider! He was about fifty yards away, his horse standing on a tiny knoll, outlined sharply against the green of the pinons behind him. The horse was a buckskin, a long-legged, magnificent animal, and the rider was tall, broad in the shoulder, and clothed in black trousers, a dark gray shirt, and a black Mexican-style jacket. For an instant she might have turned and fled, so frightened was she, so startled by the horseman’s unexpected appearance, but she sat her mare, her eyes wide and expectant, and then the buckskin started to walk down the knoll toward her.
Under the low flat brim of his black hat, the Rider’s face was scarcely visible, and as he drew near she noticed that he wore two guns, tied down. He drew up suddenly and, to her relief, lifted a gloved hand and brushed his hat back. She saw first that he was handsome, with a strong, rugged face, brown from wind and sun, and green eyes that had the look of the desert at their corners.
“You are Lona?” he asked. His voice was strong, clear, friendly.
“Yes,” she said, “how did you know my name?”
“I have known it for a long time,” he said. “Why did you come here today?”
“Why, I …” She hesitated. “I was curious!” she said. “Just plain curious.”
He chuckled, and she liked the sound. There was droll humor in his eyes. “Don’t blame you! From what I hear, a lot of folks are curious. How about Frank Mailer an’ Poke Markham? Are they curious?”
“A little. I think Father is more curious than Frank.”
At her use of the word father, he looked at her again. “You call him father?” he asked.
“Why, of course! He is my father. What else would I call him?”
“I could think of a number of things,” he said grimly. “Want to talk awhile?” he suggested suddenly. “No use you coming clear out here to see the strange rider and not getting to talk with him.”
She hesitated, but he swung down, and so she dismounted. He took the bridle of her horse and ground-hitched them both on a patch of grass in the lee of a cliff where subirrigation kept the grass green. Then he took off his hat and walked toward her. He had dark curly hair and a quizzical humor in his eyes.
“Don’t worry about this,” he said, smiling at her. “I know this is a mighty lonely place for a girl to be talkin’ to a stranger, but later you’ll understand.”
“What will I understand?” she said evenly. She was frankly puzzled by him and by his attitude. He had known her name, and he seemed to know something about her, but certainly there was nothing in his manner that would in any way offer a cause for resentment.
“Lots of things.” He dug out the makings and dropped to a rock facing her. He was, she noticed, also facing the opening up which she had ridden. “How’d you happen to come here?”
“I heard you had been seen on the rims, and that I should come here and wait. Rusty, he’s our new hand, told me that. Very mysterious, if you ask me!”
He grinned. “He’s quite a guy, Rusty is. You can trust him.”
“Oh, you know him?” She was startled.
“Rusty? If you ever need a friend, he’s your man.” He drew deep on the cigarette. “You were away to school quite awhile, weren’t you? How old were you when you left?”
She looked at him seriously. “Oh, I was only five then. Father sent me away to the sisters’ school, said a ranch was no place to raise a girl who had so far to go. I mean, so many years in which to grow up. I used to return for vacations after I was fifteen. Once in a while, that is.”
“I don’t remember a lot of things from when I was five,” he
said casually. “Do you? I mean, do you remember your father very well?”
“Some things about him, but it’s all sort of funny and mixed up. He was awfully good to me, I remember that. He was sort of sweet, too. I remember riding in a wagon for ever so long, and how he used to tell me stories about my mother-she died a year before we started west-and about the ranch that was waiting for us out here. The place where he had hoped to take my mother. He said he had taken it in my name, and it would always be mine.”
“Has your dad changed much?”
She nodded. “Quite a lot. But he’s had trouble, I guess. He never says much anymore, not to me, at least, and sometimes he acts sort of strange. But he’s all right,” she added hurriedly. “I love him.”
He turned his green eyes full upon her and there was something so searching in those eyes that she was disturbed. “Is that wrong?” she asked indignantly. “To love your father?”
“No, it isn’t.” He threw down his cigarette and rubbed it out with his toe. “In fact, that’s the way it should be. On the other hand, maybe this particular gent doesn’t deserve loving.”
He looked over at her. “Lona, we’ve got to have more than one talk, I can see that. Some things I might want to tell you, you wouldn’t want to believe now. Later you might.’ But first off, I want to ask you to mention meeting me to no one. Rusty would be all right, if you could do it where nobody could hear. Remember this: I’m your friend and you’ve got to trust me. You’re in a position right now where you’ll need friends, and badly!”
“Why do you say that?” she demanded.
“Haven’t they talked to you about marryin’ Frank Mailer?”
She nodded. “Yes, of course. Father wants me to marry him.”
“You want to marry him?”
Lona hesitated. Why was this stranger asking all these questions? Who was he? “No,” she said honestly. “I don’t.”
“Then,” he said, “you mustn’t. No matter what they say or what they do,” he insisted, “don’t marry him! Don’t refuse right out, just evade the issue. Find excuses … clothes you have to have, plans for the wedding, just anything. You won’t have to delay it long, because I think there will be a lot happening and soon. If the worst comes to the worst, see Rusty. You can trust him, like I said.” He walked to the horses. “And can you meet me here again? The day after tomorrow?”
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