Down the Long Hills (1968)

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Down the Long Hills (1968) Page 6

by L'amour, Louis


  And then Old Three-Paws charged.

  THE GRIZZLY HAD expected with that juggernaut charge to smash the stallion back against the brush and trees, where the weight of the bear’s body would carry the horse off balance long enough for teeth and claws to do their work.

  The stallion leaped aside, pivoting on his forefeet and letting go with both iron-shod hoofs. The kick caught the bear on the shoulder and flank as he reached the end of his charge, and it was he who was knocked off balance, falling on his bad side.

  He was up instantly, but not in time to escape the driving strike of the stallion’s forefeet, smashing down for a kill. The bear moved, evading one hoof, but the other ripped a great gash in his shoulder.

  Warily, as if realizing that until now he had been lucky, Big Red circled the bear.

  Three-Paws reared up on his hind legs, wanting to get in a blow with his forepaw that might break the stallion’s neck or his leg. It was at this moment that Hardy chose to let fly with his first arrow.

  It was not a particularly good arrow and it was not shot from a particularly good bow, but the distance was less than fifty feet and the white spot near the base of the grizzly’s throat made a perfect target.

  Hardy drew his bow to its utmost, and let go. The arrow shot true, striking the bear in the throat, a bit to one side, but going in for more than half its length.

  The grizzly struck at the stinging in his throat, then half-turned, staring toward his new enemy. He caught sight of the boy near the bole of the tree, and instantly he went for him. Hardy, his bow hung over his shoulder, was already scrambling up the tree when the bear glimpsed him.

  The branches were low, for he had chosen the tree well, and Betty Sue was already climbing higher to give him room.

  As the bear charged for the tree, the stallion leaped in, great jaws agape, and slashed the bear on the hindquarters. The grizzly wheeled, striking a mighty blow that would have ripped the stallion apart had it landed; as it was, it left a long thin streak across one side that almost instantly began to show blood.

  Old Three-Paws was really angry now. He stood there staring, shifting his eyes from the stallion to the boy in the tree; but mostly he watched the stallion as it moved back and forth in front of him, well beyond reach, but within leaping distance if the bear gave the stallion a chance.

  A fighting stallion is an awesome creature, able to rip with teeth, clamp with mighty jaws, kick with the hind feet, or strike with the forefeet, yet Hardy knew that Big Red was no match for the grizzly, even a crippled grizzly such as this one was.

  But the grizzly had been badly hurt. The kick had knocked the wind from him, his side hurt him now, and there was bleeding from his shoulder and rump, but it was the arrow in his throat that worried him most. He tried to get at it with his teeth, but he could not. He heard the stallion start, and waited with slavering jaws, the foam now mixed with blood. “Red!” Hardy yelled. “No!”

  The stallion was beyond hearing, beyond caring. Before him was his enemy, and he started forward, almost dancing, neck extended, lips curled back over his great teeth.

  Ashawakie rested on one knee in the brush. He had seen only a little of the terrible fight, just a glimpse of it in the few seconds since his arrival; and the whole fight had not yet lasted a minute. Carefully, he lifted his rifle, watching for a good shot at the bear.

  This was his old enemy. Here was his chance to destroy his fear. If this was a medicine bear, as he almost half-believed, his bullet would be useless; but if it was not, his old enemy would be destroyed, his fear gone forever.

  Ashawakie took careful aim, the bear turned slightly, and Ashawakie eased back the hammer.

  In the stillness, as the stallion moved forward, cat-footed, the click of the hammer was loud, and it was a sound Old Three Paws had heard before. He turned toward the sound, and Ashawakie’s finger tightened .. . tightened … his eye held on the sight-picture.. .. Suddenly the rifle leaped in his hands, and the great bear, struck full in the chest, staggered back and went to all fours. Hastily, the Indian started to reload. Old Three-Paws heaved himself to try to rise up, but he only succeeded in falling back on his haunches.

  Now, Hardy thought-if I could only get Big Red. If I could drop on his back, and get Betty Sue down from the tree, we could slip away.

  He called again, this time more softly. “Red! Big Red, come here!”

  The call reached the stallion and he hesitated, still wanting to attack, yet fearing the bear, knowing the danger that lay in the grizzly. Again he heard the call, more insistent now, and somehow the old habits of love and obedience fought down his fury, his instinctive lust to destroy lest he be destroyed.

  Old Three-Paws was puzzled. He had come here to kill a horse, not such a creature of fury incarnate as this, nor had he expected to be assailed on every side. Again he tried to snap at the irritating thing thrust into his throat.

  He started to growl, and coughed on the blood trickling down his throat. He heaved himself up, and started for the horse. Ashawakie, within his place of conceal-

  *

  (MISSING TEXT)

  *

  pleading voice, the voice he knew and loved so well. Hardy scrambled from the limb to his back. “Let’s go! he whispered.

  The stallion hesitated. They could hear the bear floundering in the brush, but there was no other sound.

  Reluctantly, the stallion let himself be turned away. Scrambling out of the hollow, Hardy found a dim trail and took it, then he deliberately headed back for the river.

  He was nearing it when he saw a dim trail left by wagons-not many wagons, and long ago, but it was a trail and it was pointing westward. Red took it at a gallop, then slowed to a trot. Leaning over, Hardy could see the red streaks left by the bear’s claws. Behind them there sounded another shot.

  There was still light in the sky, and the crimson along the ridges was just fading, the higher clouds still flushed and pink above them. Hardy had no thought except to escape, and he rode swiftly. Once away from the scene of the fight, Big Red seemed eager enough to be going, and they made good time, crossing a shoulder of the mountain by a faint trail, and descending toward the river.

  There they came upon an old wagon trail, and Hardy followed it, content to be headed west, or almost west.

  He had no idea who had been shooting from the brush, but he suspected it was the Indian who had followed them. All he could think of was that they were getting away, leaving the grizzly behind. Now, for the first time, he was aware that he was really frightened. It came over him all of a sudden, and he clung, trembling, to the stallion’s back.

  After a while he felt better; the stars came out, and the big stallion moved on steadily, seemingly in no hurry to stop for the night. A light wind came down from the mountains, cool from the snows and fresh from the pines. Several times Hardy almost fell asleep, but the horse plodded on, regardless.

  The trail turned slightly north, then still farther north, but Hardy was only half awake, and scarcely noticed. They came out of the trees into a valley of long meadows, streams, and scattered clumps of trees. And then, suddenly, the stallion stopped.

  Hardy opened his eyes wide. Betty Sue was asleep in his arms, but the big horse, ears up, was staring ahead, and seemed to be scenting the air.

  Hardy sat up tall and peered past Big Red’s head. Some distance off, right down on the ground, there was a light… a fire!

  A campfire .. .

  Hardy’s heart took a great leap … it must be pa! Pa had come hunting for them! He slapped his small heels against the stallion’s side and started forward. But, the big horse hung back, seemingly reluctant to go on.

  Could it be Indians?

  Hardy rode more cautiously. Suddenly, somewhere ahead, a horse whinnied, and there was a flurry of movement near the fire.

  Hardy walked the horse a little closer. He could see two saddles, some pack saddles, and a coffeepot on the fire, and there was a smell of bacon. …

  “Set right still,�
�� a voice said, “or I’m likely to fire. Now you jest walk that horse right up to the fire an’ le’s have a look at you.”

  Hardy tried to speak, but his throat was tight. He walked the horse forward, and suddenly he heard the voice say, “Hell, it’s a couple of kids!”

  “They come from somewhar,” the other man said. “That means thar’s folks about.”

  “Here? At this time of year?”

  “Well, look at “em.”

  One of the men was lean and somewhat stooped; he had a hard, angular face and small cruel eyes. He walked forward, looking at Big Red. “Jud,” he exclaimed, “would you look at that horse now?

  Man’s there’s a hoss!”

  “He belongs to my pa,” Hardy managed to say.

  “Well, mebbe. Whar is your pa, boy?”

  “He’s . .. he’s back on the trail. He’s hunting us.”

  The other man was shorter, barrel-chested. He walked slowly up to them, studying the stallion. “You mean he don’t know whar you be? How’d that happen?”

  Betty Sue wakened and was staring at the men, wide-eyed. She felt tense in Hardy’s arms, as if frightened. Well, Hardy reflected, so was he.

  There was something about these men .. .

  Hardy explained briefly how their wagons had been burned, how they had started on west. Once he started talking, he told them about the Indian, then about the grizzly.

  “Aw, come off it!” The shorter man scoffed. “A grizzly’d kill you quicker’n scat. No horse can match up to a grizzly!”

  “Red wasn’t afraid. He fought him.”

  “Reckon he did, at that,” the taller man said. “He got clawed along the ribs.” The man reached a hand up for Red’s bridle, and the stallion jerked his head away.

  “Don’t you pull away from me, damn you!” The tall man lifted a hand to strike Red, but the stallion swung away and Hardy said, “Don’t you dare strike my horse!”

  “Take it easy, Cal,” Jud said, more quietly. “You’re likely to lose ‘em all. I figure we better let those kids have some grub an” sort of study on this a mite.”

  “I don’t like any horse actin’ up with me.

  What he needs is a taste of the club.”

  “Cal’s just a-talkin’, boy. Now, why don’t you two git down? We got us some grub here, an’ in the mornin’ we can sort of figure out what to do.

  Mebbe we can find your pa for you.”

  Hardy didn’t like the looks or the sound of these men, and he wanted nothing so much as to ride away, but the two men were standing too close. One of them was all poised for just such a move, so though he didn’t want to, Hardy slid to the ground. He would wait until the men were asleep, then they would slip away.

  The man called Cal started to reach again for the bridle, but Red pulled back, eyes rolling.

  “Let me stake him out,” Hardy said. “He knows me.”

  “You jest do that, youngster.” Jud looked past him, shaking his head at Cal. “Your little sister, she can jest stay here with us. No use her wanderin’ around in the dark, out yonder.”

  When he had picketed the stallion, Hardy went up to Red and rubbed him gently on the shoulder.

  “Looks to me as if I got us into trouble, Red.

  You be careful now. Maybe we can get away from them.”

  He walked tiredly back to the fire. Betty Sue was seated on a rock near the fire, her eyes big and staring.

  Jud looked over at her. “Now how old would that one be, boy?”

  “She’s three,” he said, “just past three.”

  “Don’t seem reasonable,” Cal offered, “you two out here alone like that. You say your pa is huntin’ you? How d’you know that?”

  “I just know it. That’s the way pa is.”

  Cal chuckled. “Chances are he figures the Injuns killed you. He ain’t huntin’ you, boy.”

  “That’s not true!” Hardy was near to tears. “He is so hunting us!”

  Hardy ate some food while the two men talked, muttering together in low tones. Finally Jud brought them a blanket. “You two roll up in that. We’ll have us a talk in the mornin’.”

  Cal glanced over at them. “An’ don’t do any wanderin’ about camp. I got a mighty touchy way with a gun. I might mistake you for an Injun.”

  When they were covered up near the fire, Betty Sue whispered, “I don’t like those men!”

  “Ssh!” After a moment Hardy said, “I don’t like them, either!” Then he added, his lips close to her ear, “Maybe we can slip off.”

  With the best intentions of staying awake, he fell sound asleep. He had been tired for such a long time, and now for the first time in days he was under a blanket. In the night he woke up, hearing a low murmur of voices.

  One of the men was speaking. “Look at it, Jud.

  Nobody even knows they’re alive. And I’d give an arm for that horse.”

  “What about that Injun?”

  “Boy’s talk. Iffen there was an Injun, you can bet that b’ar got him.”

  “Wonder who the boy’s pa was?”

  “What’s it matter? Nobody’ll ever hear of it.”

  “Might recognize the horse.”

  “We found him astray… or swapped him from some Injun. Ain’t one chance in a million we’d ever see anybody who’d know the horse. You go to sleep now.”

  Hardy lay wide awake, staring up at the stars.

  He was terribly afraid. Once he half sat up, but he saw Cal watching him, and lay down again.

  It would be very hard to get away from these two.

  DAYLIGHT CAME WITH A chill wind off the mountains, rustling the leaves of the brush, and moaning a little among the pines. The camp lay in an open meadow on the banks of a small stream. There were clumps of willow, a few cottonwoods, and on the slopes of the mountains the golden aspen in thick stands.

  Hardy was up, rustling wood for the fire. He was wary now, watching for the slim chance of getting to Big Red, and getting Betty Sue into the saddle. He was frightened, but he told himself he must be brave. He must do what pa would want him to do; but he had no weapon with which to fight these men. He could only wait, and watch for his chance.

  At the worst, he might have to run away, even without Betty Sue. That thought was hateful, but for a moment it seemed to him there was little likelihood of their harming her if he was at large and able to testify against them..

  .. No, he couldn’t bear to think of doing that. Somehow there had to be a way to escape. Pa, he said in his thoughts, pa please come!

  Now, he thought, he would even be glad to see the Indian. Just as the Indian’s arrival had given them a chance to escape the grizzly, so his coming now might give them the chance to run away from these men and hide.

  He rustled the fire together, and had coffee water on by the time the two men had pulled on their boots.

  “This one’s quite a hand, Cal,” Jud commented.

  “He’s a likely lad around a camp.”

  Cal did not speak. He looked at the children with a sour expression. It was only when he watched Big Red that his face lit up. “I’m goin’ to ride that horse,” he said. “I’m goin’ to ride him this mornin’.”

  “Pa don’t let anybody ride that horse but him or me,” Hardy said.

  Cal looked over at him. “You keep your trap shut, boy. Your pa ain’t here, an’ I’ll ride him any time I see fit.”

  Well, Hardy thought, you take your chances then.

  Big Red was no horse to fool around with. Hardy remembered when that gangling Peterson boy thought he was a smart aleck. He was going to ride Red whether anybody liked it or not, and the Peterson boy was known as a good rider…. Well, he lasted less than a jump, and if he hadn’t rolled out between the corral bars he would have been killed.

  Maybe that’s the way, Hardy thought. Maybe that’s the way it will happen.

  “Pa will be coming along,” he said quietly, “and pa has a way about him.”

  Jud looked over at him before Cal could spea
k.

  “Who is your pa, kid? What’s his name?”

  “He’s at Fort Bridger,” Hardy said, “and his name is Scott Collins.”

  Cal’s head turned slowly toward Hardy, his mean eyes staring at him. Hardy thought Jud looked kind of greenish around the gills. “Did you say Scott Collins?”

  “Yes,” said Hardy. “Do you know him?”

  “Not exactly … we know of him.” Jud looked at Hardy. “How’s your pa with a shootin’ iron, son?”

  “He used to win all the turkey shoots back home,” Hardy answered. “And folks who served with him during the Indian fighting said he was the best shot they ever did see.” Suddenly Hardy remembered a story he had heard Mr. Andy tell around the fire when he thought Hardy was asleep.

  The boy told it now. “One time a bunch of men came through our part of the country and stole a cow of pa’s, and some stock belonging to some neighbors. They figured the stock was lost for good, but pa, he wouldn’t say quit. He just set out and followed those men. It was four months before he came back, and he had all that stock and the horses the four men had been riding.

  He had followed their sign clear down into Missouri.

  “Somebody asked pa what would he do if those men came back hunting their horses, and pa just grinned and said he never was afraid of ghosts.”

  Jud looked thoughtful and glanced at Cal, who shrugged and said, “He’s just one man. What he don’t know won’t start any wars.”

  “I don’t like it, Cal.”

  Cal snorted, but Jud was persistent. He looked over at Hardy. “Yours must’ve been the last wagon train west,” he said. “This here’s late in the season.”

  “That’s what Bill Squires said.”

  “Squires?”

  “He stopped by to do some yarnin’, as he said. He was with us the night before the Indians came, but he rode off by himself, going west. He promised Mr. Andy he’d tell pa we were on our way.”

  “Cal, we better have another think.”

  “Like hell!”

  Jud sliced bacon into the pan, and did not speak for a moment. Betty Sue huddled close to Hardy and sipped a little weak coffee.

  “If you’re figurin’ to keep that horse,” Jud said quietly, evidently fearing Cal’s irritation, “you’d best forget about ridin’ him now.

 

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