The Lonesome Gods
Louis L'amour
*
Chapter 1
I Sat Very Still, As Befitted A Small Boy Among Strangers, Staring wide-eyed into a world I did not know. I was six years old and my father was dying.
Only last year I had lost my mother. She died longing for that far-off, lovely California where she was born, and of which she never tired of talking.
"Warm and sunny," people said when speaking of California, but I knew it as a place where fear lived.
Now we were going there. We were crossing the desert to face that fear, and I was afraid.
My father sat close beside me trying to sleep, but torn occasionally by violent spells of coughing that caused the other passengers to turn their heads, some in pity, some in irritation.
Our wagon, drawn by six half-wild mustangs, plunged into the night, rocking and rumbling over a dim track that only the driver seemed to see. Ours was a desperate venture, a lone wagon with two outriders attempting the crossing from Santa Fe to California.
Lying awake in the darkness, I remembered what people in Santa Fe had said. "It's a crazy idea! One wagon? Even if they can slip by the Apaches, the Yumas will be waiting at the crossing of the Colorado.
"Remember what happened to that last outfit? The Yumas agreed to ferry them across the river, but when they had half of them on the far side, the Yumas just took off with all their goods and stock. Left 'em to die in the desert, with nothing."
"Only they didn't die. Not all of them."
"I'll say one thing. If anybody could take a wagon through alone, it would be Doug Farley."
"Maybe. But he's only one man. As for me, I'll just wait until spring and go through with a wagon train."
When I told my father what they had said, he nodded. "We have to go now, son. I cannot wait." He hesitated, then continued. "Some folks would think me wrong to tell you of this, but you must be prepared.
"I cannot wait until spring, Johannes. The doctors say I haven't that much time. They say I am going to die. You will have to grow up without me, and growing up is never easy. People only talk about how wonderful youth is when they have forgotten how hard it was."
We had gone together to see the wagon. Doug Farley had built it for the purpose, and the planks were not only tightly fitted but caulked so it would float if need be. The side walls were lined with a double thickness of buffalo hide to add more protection from bullets.
Eight people could ride in the wagon in some comfort, but on this trip there would be but six, including me, and I wasn't very large. Each man and woman was required to have a rifle in good condition and at least two hundred rounds of ammunition. Each was required to demonstrate that he or she knew how to load and fire his or her weapon.
"We will travel by night," Farley warned us, "wherever possible. No loud talking, no noise. No shooting unless we are fired upon."
"What about hunting?" The question was asked by a thick-necked, powerful man in a black suit. His name was Fletcher. He had a square, brutal face with small eyes. I did not like him.
"There will be no hunting," Farley answered. "We have supplies enough, so there will be no need. A shot would only attract the trouble we're trying to avoid."
"You've been over this trail?"
"Five times, and I've scouted it just for this trip. Every stopping place is chosen now, and I've selected alternatives if something goes wrong."
"How'd it go before?"
"The first time was with a party of mountain men. We had one hell of a fight--five men killed, and we lost all our furs."
"The other times?"
"The army survey party was strong and we had no trouble except for losing some mules and one man who just wandered off and was lost.
"Another time, with a wagon train, we got through to Los Angeles, losing only two wagons and some stock." "Los Angeles? What's that?"
"It's a little cow town about twenty miles from the sea. Used to be an Injun village. That's the place we're heading for."
"What's this here trip goin' to cost?"
"Three hundred dollars each. Cash on the barrel head." "That's a lot of money."
"Take it or leave it. If you wait until spring, you can go through for half that. Maybe less. I am taking people who wish to go through now." He paused. "We leave at daybreak."
"How about my son?" my father asked.
Farley glanced at me. His eyes lingered for a moment. "He's small. He can go for one hundred dollars."
"That's not fair!" Fletcher was irritable. "You asked for people who could handle guns. That boy certainly can't." My father turned slowly to look at Fletcher. "As to that, my friend, we shall see. In the meantime, I believe I can shoot well enough for both of us."
"What the hell does that mean?"
Father glanced over at Farley. "Mr. Farley? I am Zachary Verne."
Doug Farley lit his cigar and dropped the twig back into the fire. "That's good enough for me."
"But--"
Farley ignored the interruption. "He goes," he said, and walked away.
My father dropped a hand to my shoulder. "Let's get our gear together, son."
As they walked away, I heard the heavyset man, Fletcher, protesting to the others. "Now, what does all that mean? He just says his name and Fadey's ready to take him on. The way he coughs, he won't last the trip!" "Whoever he is," someone said, "Farley knew him." At our room my father told me to wait and he went in to pick up our few things. I sat on the bench shivering, thinking of that fierce old man who awaited me in Los Angeles. He had hated my father, and when my father and mother fled across the desert, he pursued them, hoping, it was said, to kill them both.
Nor dared I tell my father how frightened I was. He did not know of the times I overheard my parents talking when it was believed I was asleep. "After all," I had heard my father say, "he is the boy's grandfather. How could he hate his grandson?" And then he added, a note of desperation in his voice, "There is nobody else, Connie, nobody at all."
Once my father had been tall and strong; now he was pale and shrunken from illness of the lungs and now he grieved for the wife he had loved and the son he would never see grow to manhood.
A dozen times, seeking some way out, they had repeated almost the same conversation. "Zack," my mother would say, "what else can you do? There is nobody else." Then suddenly one night, only shortly before my mother's death, my father had suddenly burst out, "There's that other thing, Connie! If only I'd had sense enough to keep my mouth shut! He would never have known that I knew!"
"You were angry, Zack. You didn't think."
"I was angry, but that is no excuse. I was angry for Felipe. He would have told no one, but he was killed. Murdered.
"How could a man fall off a cliff he had walked and ridden a hundred times, in dark and daylight, in storm and wind? The night was moonlit, the trail was clear, and Felipe was a careful man. No, it was murder, it had to be murder."
"I know my father is a hard man, but--"
"He is a proud man, Connie. Pride of name and pride of family are an obsession with him. Of course, he isn't the only one. Most of the old Spanish families are that way. The difference is that in California some of the first settlers were simply soldiers or mule drivers, and those who came later did not wish to be associated with them. "In your father's world a gentleman did not work with his hands, and a gentleman was always a man on horseback. In my world men who worked with their hands, men who could do, were the most respected. When I met you I was an able-bodied seaman, even though my father was a ship's captain, and that was what I intended to be. "In his world a man like me never spoke to a man like him unless addressed, and then only with hat in hand and head bowed. To make it even worse,
I was an Anglo and a Protestant. I don't know how I had the courage to speak to you."
My mother's voice was low, but I heard her say, "I wanted you to. You were very handsome. My mother thought so, too."
"Then three of your father's vaqueros came to me and said if I ever spoke to you again, they would horsewhip me."
"I heard of that."
"I told them they were fine men, handsome men, it would be a pity for them to die so young."
"I heard it, Zachary, I heard them talking of it. We women, we cannot speak much, but we can listen, and there was very little we did not hear. They admired you for it. I remember one of them saying, 'He is a man, that one!' "
There was silence; then my father asked, in a much lower tone, "Connie? Did Felipe know?"
"I . . . I believe so. What other reason ... ? I mean, he was a fine old man. He had been with us forever, it seemed."
"But why that night? What happened?"
There was no answer, and lying in the darkness and listening, eyes wide with wonder, I knew there would be no more talking. Whenever that subject came up, conversation ended. My mother would talk no more. What dreadful secret could there be that so frightened my mother? What was it my grandfather feared to have known?
The wagon went westward in the morning, driving over a hard-packed trail, simply one wagon alone, that might be going anywhere. Only when we neared the lava beds did we begin traveling by night.
After that there were usually no more campfires at night, and those by day were brief, for cooking and coffee. By day the horses grazed and the men slept, always in carefully selected places where they were hidden from observation. One of the outriders was forever on guard. I came to know them both.
Jacob Finney was a man of medium height, a man who never seemed to smile, but with a droll sense of humor. He was a slim, wiry man, part Cherokee, and from northern Georgia. "Been huntin' my own meat since I was frog-high," he told me. "I was nigh onto seventeen before I et meat I didn't shoot myself."
He was twenty, he said, but he seemed older. "Pa, he up an' died, leavin' the place to Amby an' me. Amby was fixin' to marry, an' that place wouldn't support the both of us, so I taken out."
He paused. "Amby's wife was a Natchez woman. You know about them? They was a dif'rent kind of Injun. Worshiped the sun. They got theirselves into a friction with the French from Loosiana and those Frenchmen wiped 'em out. Well, almost.
"Them that got away, some came into our mountains, an' Amby, he taken up with one. She was a rare kind of woman, tall and mighty handsome. She'd been one of their top folks, one of the Suns, as they called them. Amby, of course, he's a fine-lookin' man. Tall, strong, and better educated in his books than me. I taken to the deep woods and far country, he taken to readin', talkin', and the like.
"Well, seein' them together, it looked like I was the oddnumber, so I told 'em to hold a plot in the buryin' ground and I taken off west.
"Had me some Injun fights then, one led by a man name of Karnes where twenty-odd of us stood off more'n two hundred Injuns. We gave 'em what-for, we did." The other outrider, Kelso, was an older, quieter man, a man with dark red hair streaked with gray. He'd made two trips over the Santa Fe Trail as a teamster and was veteran of two or three fights with the Kiowa and Comanche.
Steadily we moved westward, keeping off the skyline but using the high, wide-open country of a night when it was possible. Before daybreak we'd be holed up in one of those hideouts Farley had scouted long before. There we would sleep, read, play cards, or wonder the hot days through, waiting for the blessed coolness of the night. Inside the wagon we talked little, and Papa least of all. Papa was a sociable man most of the time, but on this trip he kept to himself. Maybe it was his illness, but maybe it was something else, something that worried him more and more as he drew closer to California. Jacob Finney rode up beside me one day when we were walking to ease the horses. We'd been on the trail no more than an hour, and it was coming on to moonlight. "Want a ride, son? You can he'p me look for Injuns." One of the passengers spoke up. "You will frighten the child."
"No, sir," I said. "I ain't ... I mean, I'm not frightened." Although I was, a little bit.
He took me up on the saddle in front of him. "We don't talk," he said, "we listen. Injuns mostly sleep of a night, but sometimes they are late gettin' back to their lodges, just like we are. We want to kind of ease by 'ens, like." "We could fight."
"Yes, son, we could, but fightin's something you do when you've tried everything else."
Chapter 2
Our wagon was our world. We were six people isolated from all about us as long as the wagon moved. We slept, we read, we stared at the canvas overhead or at one another, and we listened. Always, we listened.
Our stops during the day were brief, and always in selected positions where concealment was possible. Our rules had been laid down before the wagon started to roll.
One or the other of the outriders did the cooking. No pans were allowed to rattle, no voices were raised. Our campfires were brief and built from wood that promised little or no smoke. The side walls of our wagon were higher than usual, but the canvas top was much lower than on the prairie schooner or Conestoga, and the canvas itself was browned by smoke and usage. We wanted no glaring white top to draw the eyes of our enemies. As we drew nearer the Colorado River, our travel periods were shorter and we were in hiding well before daylight.
We saw no Indians. Once Jacob Finney found tracks, but they were several days old.
My father talked little and did his best to stifle his coughing, yet it was a problem. Opposite us sat Thomas Fraser, a lean, tall Scotsman in a gray store-bought suit that was too small for him. Throughout the day he took notes in a small notebook he carried in the side pocket of his coat.
Hunched over the notebook, his thin shoulders like a buzzard's wings starting to unfold, he hovered in scowling intensity over his stub of pencil. I wondered how he could write at all while the wagon moved, but somehow he accomplished it. When we stopped for the day, he wandered off by himself to sit on a rock or log and stare at nothingness.
On the last night before reaching the river, Mr. Farley led the horses to a secret tank where water collected from the rains. "We've got to water them good," he explained, "else when they smell the river they'll run for it. There'd be no holdin"em. We'd have things scattered to hell an' gone, and no end of racket. Bring ever' Injun in the country down on us."
"Are there Indians close by?" I asked.
"I hope not, son. But they're about. Not many for such a big country, but they show up when least expected. Yumas can be almighty unpleasant, and they are fighters. Your pa can tell you."
Jacob Finney came up, his rifle in the hollow of his arm. "Smoke off to the northwest. Thin trail."
"How far?"
"Six, eight miles. Maybe less. This side the river, I'd say." He paused. "Want me to scout the trail to the river?"
Farley hesitated, then said, "No, we've got it to do, and we'll move out quietly as soon as it's dark. No use tipping our hand until we must. With luck we can be across the river before they know we're around."
He glanced over at me where I stood listening. "Y'see, son, Injuns will come out an' study the country after the sun goes down. The glare is gone, everything is still, and things sort of stand out. Sound carries further and any movement is easier seen. You put that away in your skull an' hold it for another time." He spat. "No, Jacob, we'll sit tight and take our chances."
It was very hot and the air was still. The wagon was drawn up among some cedars and the horses were grazing on a small patch of grass. Around us was a forest of sandstone boulders, and beyond them a rocky ridge. There was a good-sized pool of water.
"They've thought it out," Papa said, speaking softly. "The wagon's tight, and if need be we can cut loose from the gear and float all the way to the Gulf."
My father was a puzzle to me. From the start there was a difference in the way Farley, Kelso, and Finney treated him. They seemed
to accept him as one of themselves, but the others were not treated so. Why was this so? Of course, my father had been over the trail before, yet even that did not seem reason enough.
"How much farther?" I asked.
"The hardest part will be after we cross the river. From the river to the mountains is a long way, all of it desert. There are bare ridges, lava beds, some cinder cones, and--" "What's a cinder cone?"
"Easiest way to explain it is, it's a small volcano. Most of 'em are a couple of hundred feet high, or less, cone-shaped, with a crater inside."
"Is there water in the desert?"
"Here and there, if you know where to look. There's a river, too. Water's not too good, and it isn't much of a river, only a few feet across, and some places no more than an inch deep."
"Where will I live?"
My father was silent for a few minutes and then said, "Your grandfather is a very rich man. He has thousands of cattle, sheep, and horses. He has a big ranch, and then he has a house in town, too.
"Most of the men who work on the ranch are Indians, those in town are Mexicans. Good men, most of them." I wanted to ask him about Felipe, and what he might have known that he was not wanted to know, but I did not. I could not let my father realize that his private conversations had been overheard, even though I only listened when they spoke about the past or about my grandfather.
We dozed, awakened, then dozed again. Fletcher paced irritably. He was a difficult, impatient man, one accustomed to having his own way, I thought, and he did not like being just one of a group, nor did he like my father. I did not like Fletcher. nor did he like me.
"What's the matter with him?" he demanded once. "He doesn't talk like any boy I know."
My father's expression was bland. "He has spent much more time with adults, so he talks like one, even thinks like one. We've been in few places where there were other children, a fact I regret."
Later, when I had gone to get a drink from the pool, I heard Farley talking to Kelso. "He's trouble, and I don't want trouble. I'm not worried about Verne. He can take care of himself, but I don't want shooting."
the Lonesome Gods (1983) Page 1