What would Sir Walter Scott have thought of us? I wondered. Yet those who rode with me were fit men to ride with any of the clansmen of whom he had written. They were men of much the same stripe, driven by many of the same motives.
Those fierce clansmen of Scotland were often driven by pride to actions as foolish as those of my grandfather, and for much the same absurd reasons. I recalled the story of Donald the Hammer who when he saw his son actually working in the fields rushed across the stream intending to kill him to erase the shame.
Reading had done that for me—that even when I disapproved of what my grandfather had done, I could understand him. It made his crimes no less, but left me with a clearer view.
We rode into the morning, but we rode alert for trouble and aware of the tracks we followed, all too plain, all too easy. The problem was, how far would they lead us before laying the trap?
The sun was rising when we came down the narrow trail off the mountain into the San Fernando Valley, a vast waste of sparse grass and prickly pear with a few cattle scattered here and there. In the distance lay the old San Fernando Mission.
They were moving fast, keeping the horses at a trot, following along the base of the mountains.
“They’ve chosen the place, I’m thinking,” Finney suggested. “Some special place to hole up and wait for you.”
“They’ve a full day’s start on us,” Monte added.
We held to a steady pace, took a short nooning, then pushed on. The trail was rarely used, and from the top of each small rise we could see the tracks several hundred yards in advance.
Short of sundown we saw a trickle of water coming down from some rocks among the oaks and willows. There was grass for the horses and a good place to camp.
Myron Brodie came over after staking his horse. He hunkered down beside the fire. “Notice the tracks back by that big lichen-covered boulder?”
“They’ve got company.”
“Two more,” Brodie said. “Probably whoever was in town watching to see if we left, and when. That’ll make maybe a dozen men they’ve got.”
“That figures about right.”
“And there’s five of us?” Monte lifted an eyebrow.
The coffee was coming to a boil. I pushed fuel under it and glanced at him. “The way you talk, I figured you’d be good for two, anyways, and those El Monte boys—”
“No more’n five,” Hardin said, straight-faced, “an’ do tell ’em not to bunch up. I like to take ’em single and straight up.”
There were oaks behind us with a lot of fallen branches. Some of those blue oaks, as they called them, shed branches like leaves, sometimes good-sized limbs. All of which made a place nobody could come through without making noise. Backing up against that with the stream from the spring before me and some rocks lower down, I felt good.
The others scattered out, so if the thieves came at us at night they wouldn’t get us all crowded together. Each chose his own bed in his own way and back from the small fire we’d had.
“I’m not sleepy,” Brodie suggested, “so you boys roll up and catch some shut-eye. I’m good for two, maybe four hours.”
When Monte was bedded down, he spoke out. “They don’t care about the horses, like you said. What they want is a battle. They want to kill you.”
“They’ll let us catch up,” I said, “and maybe they will set up a camp that is a trap. They’ll corral the horses in plain sight, making them easy to get at, and they will bed down early, then slip off in the dark and wait for us.”
“It’s better not to have any preconceived ideas,” Finney suggested. “There’s no telling what they might do.”
He was right, of course, but I was trying to foresee. There were many possibilities, and I hoped to consider them all.
From now on our travel must be extremely wary, for an ambush could be mounted at any place. Each night before dropping off to sleep, I tried to work out the possibilities of the following day, but Finney had been right. We must not expect any particular course of action, but be prepared for the unexpected.
Owen Hardin awakened me at what must have been about three o’clock, judging by the position of the Big Dipper, but he was in no mood to sleep. While I tugged on my boots, he sat beside me.
“Finney tells me you spent some time down in the desert with the Cahuillas. He says there’s a big pass down there opens right into the desert. How come nobody knows much about it?”
“Folks out here are just not interested. Who cares about the desert? To most people it is just a big desolate place.”
“Never figured that way myself. I’ve prospected some, never had any luck, but there’s a-plenty to keep a man interested, old riverbeds and the like. Found some old camps, too, and some Injun writing on the walls.”
“Ben Wilson has been through that pass. You know, the man they call Don Benito. He chased a bunch of horse thieves through there at one time, and long ago a Spanish man named Romero went through. I suppose he was the first white man, but you never know.”
“Weird country,” Hardin said. “I was sixteen when we come through from Texas. Started with a herd of four hundred head of cattle. With the deserts and all, we got through with less’n seventy head.
“My brother Pete, he died out yonder. He was maybe seven year old. Wandered off from camp an’ we hunted for him most of two days. We’d about give up. Came back into camp all wore out.
“Ma, she was beside herself. So were the girls. We figured to start huntin’ again when morning came, but about midnight the dogs set up an awful barkin’ an’ me an’ Charlie, we rolled out, tired as we was, to see what was happenin’.
“We rushed out, gun in hand, and there was Pete. He was settin’ up against a rock wrapped in a great big old coat, and it taken only a look to see he was in bad shape.
“He’d fallen and hurt himself and he’d been snake-bit into the bargain. Odd thing about that, he’d busted his wrist and that was all bound up with a splint and all, and whoever taken care of him had tried to fix that snakebite, but I reckon he was too long gone.
“We taken him into camp and we tried to do for him. He was conscious from time to time when he wasn’t delirious, and he told us about fallin’, breakin’ his wrist, and gettin’ snake-bit.
“He said he yelled for us, yelled for help like, and then his mind kind of wandered off. We never could make head or tails of what he was gettin’ at. He said he was yellin’, scared as could be, when a giant showed up.”
I sat up. “A what?”
“A giant. Oh, I know! It sounds crazy. That’s what we thought, too. He said that there giant came right down into that hollow in the sand where he was lyin’ and fetched him to where there was some shade from rocks, and then the giant set his wrist and worked on that snakebite.
“Well, some little time had gone by. That poison had a chance to get through him. Wonder was he even alive. The giant picked him up an’ carried him to us, then set him down an’ left him.”
“You never saw him?”
“Never. Nor any sign of him. All we had to go on was what Pete could tell us. He said that was the biggest giant ever, that he carried Pete, a pretty solid chunk of boy, like he was a baby. To get him back to us fast, he climbed over a ridge in the dark that I wouldn’t tackle by day, an’ him carryin’ Pete.”
Hardin shrugged. “I never believed in no fairy tales, no giants or the like, but Pete swore it was the truth.”
“You say Pete died?”
“Had that poison all through him. The giant or whatever had done all he could and then brought him to us, but there was mighty little left to do.”
I slung on my gun belt. “Is that all? Nothing more?”
“One thing. Pete never lied, and he wasn’t crazy in the head when he talked of giants. When we found Pete, he was wrapped in a buckskin huntin’ coat, fringed and a
ll? Well, that coat was big! Pa, who weighed about one-sixty and stood about five-nine, him an’ another man close to his size, they put that coat on. Standin’ shoulder to shoulder, that coat was a fit for the two of them across the shoulders.”
“Have you still got that coat?”
“No, sir. We surely ain’t. Ofttimes Pa wished he had it so folks wouldn’t think he was lyin’, but Ma, she said maybe that poor man needed his coat, so we taken it back and hung it over a rock near where we’d camped.”
I walked down to the fire for coffee, and Owen joined me. “Where did that happen?” I asked.
“South of here. Down in the desert about a day’s travel this side of Indian Wells.”
* * *
Finney rode up beside me. We had been in the saddle for several hours, and the tracks had suddenly veered left into the hills. “I rode this way a few years back. There’s a valley off yonder, all surrounded by hills, a mighty pretty little hidden valley.”
“How little?”
“A few thousand acres, with a spring or two. I’ve had an idea of moving in there and settling. It’s a likely place to hide stolen stock, too.”
“Do you suppose that’s where they are headed?”
“I’d bet on it.”
We rode off the trail and into the oaks. It was very hot. With my bandanna I mopped my face and neck, squinting my eyes against the glare. When I turned in the saddle to speak to Finney, the cantle was too hot to touch.
“Used trail”—I indicated it—“but they didn’t go that way.”
“There’s a ranch down there. They wouldn’t go near it.” He sidled his horse into deeper shade. “They’re surely going on into the valley.”
He pointed to some even deeper shade where several oaks had clustered together. “Let’s ride over yonder and take a breather. It’s too hot.”
We walked our horses, occasionally ducking our heads to avoid a low branch. There were several deep pools of shade, and a faint stir of wind was coming off the shoulder of the mountain. Our shirts were soaked, and when the wind touched them, it was mighty cooling.
We stepped down from the saddle and Owen Hardin took his rifle and walked out to the farthest point of shade and hunkered down to keep watch on the trail. We all took our time in sizing up our situation. There was no protection where we were, except for the occasional fallen trees or the tree trunks themselves.
“We’ll take it easy,” I suggested. “No use killing ourselves or our horses. If you ask me, they’re holed up someplace, too.”
Monte stretched out on the thin grass and put his hat over his eyes. The water in my water bag was cooled by evaporation, and it tasted good. I took only a swallow.
“After sundown,” I said, “we’ll move on. Catch some rest.” Turning to Brodie, I said, “You want to give Owen a break in about an hour?”
“Sure.”
With my back against a big oak, I tilted my head back and closed my eyes, wishing for another breeze through my wet shirt.
Finney was close by. “Couldn’t help but hear what Hardin was sayin’ last night,” he said. “Do you reckon that was your big man from near the palm springs?”
“Isn’t likely there’d be two such. Not so close together.”
There was silence for a while and then Finney asked, “Are you goin’ back that way?”
“Uh-huh. I love that country, Jake, and there’s nothing holdin’ me in Los Angeles.”
“Nothing?” He glanced at me.
I thought of Meghan again. “No, Jake, there’s nothing to keep me. I’m going back to the desert. I don’t want to have to kill anybody, and there’s nothing keeping me, nothing at all.”
CHAPTER 44
For as long as she could remember, Aunt Elena had been rising at daybreak. She supposed it was her father’s influence. Although he had been an hidalgo with vast estates in both Spain and Morocco, it had been his custom to ride each morning with the rising sun. Often, as a small girl, she had ridden with him.
Her breakfast was frugal. Habitually she drank one cup of maté, a tea imported from the Argentine, and ate one tortilla and a piece of fruit.
She supervised the house of Don Isidro, although she and her brother had never been close. Each Saturday morning she checked her accounts as she had learned from Miss Nesselrode. She kept a careful record in one small book of what she was doing with her money, and on another page of the book she listed possible investments. She had learned from Miss Nesselrode but now went her own way, made her own plans, and in a time when much was growing and expanding, her small investments accumulated.
Although she went to mass regularly, she did not consider herself a religious woman. She loved the quiet of the church, the voices of the priests who officiated, and the subdued rustling of garments.
Often she took walks along the zanjas or under the oaks. She loved the tranquillity of those moments alone. Occasionally she was joined by a young priest, Father Jaime. They were, she suspected, kindred spirits. It was a term she had heard but had never applied to anyone until meeting Father Jaime.
On this morning she had walked alone, and upon returning to the house decided upon another cup of tea. Scarcely had she seated herself when she heard the jingle of spurs. For an instant, caught in the act of pouring, she hesitated, and a flicker of annoyance touched her eyes and mouth. She knew the step, the hard-heeled arrogance.
Don Federico, dressed for riding, came into the room. “Ah, Tía! You rise early?”
“As always.”
“I was not aware.”
“Of course.”
He gave her a sharp glance, but she was replacing the teapot. She did not offer him a cup.
“It will soon be over now.” He spoke with satisfaction.
“Is anything ever really over? Do things ever really end? No lingering aftereffects?”
He shrugged. “Johannes Verne has ridden into the desert to recover some stolen horses.” His eyes were upon her. “He will not come back. The stain will be erased.”
She tasted her tea. “Yes?”
“This time it will be finished.”
“Have you talked to Don Isidro? Is he involved?”
He made an impatient gesture. “He grows old! He is too slow to act, and we could not wait! He thinks too much, and sometimes I am afraid he weakens. No matter. I have done it.”
“You assume too much. Don Isidro wishes to be consulted.”
“He wavers and hesitates. Besides, I know what he wishes done, and am I to sit idly by while this…this peón lives?”
He turned on her suddenly. “You have never liked me, Tía.”
“What is there to like?” she asked mildly.
He flushed and his eyes turned mean. “You shall see! When I inherit—!”
“Ah?”
“Who else? They are gone. Consuelo is gone. Alfredo is gone. Now this other one, he who could never inherit anyway, he will be gone. Who else is there?”
Her shrewd old eyes taunted him. “I shall be here,” she said gently.
He made an impatient gesture. “You are a woman. What can you do?”
“I can inherit. What will you do? Kill me, too?”
He stalked across the room, standing with his back to her. “You need not worry. You shall have this place. I shall return to Spain.
“To Spain, do you hear? Who would live in this place when he can live in Madrid? Or Rome. Or Paris. I have thought it all out! I shall live in style! In elegance! Bah! What do I care what you do here? All but this house I shall sell.”
“Don Isidro is still alive. Have you plans for him, too?”
He shrugged. “He is old…old.”
“He is sixty-seven. His father lived to be ninety-five, his grandfather to eighty-nine. Don Isidro may live thirty years more.”
Don Federico
made an impatient gesture and strolled to the arch, where he could look into the patio, but he made no reply.
“He could live another thirty years, Federico, and you would be an old man then…if you live so long.”
“You talk too much.”
“If I talk, it is to stir some grain of sense in you. Do you not see? You dream. You cannot win. You build castles. You cannot defeat Johannes, as you could not defeat his father.
“You wished to marry Consuelo to ensure that you would inherit, but she would not have you. Then she married Zachary Verne.”
“A common sailor! A peón!”
“A man.”
“A man! Am I not a man?”
She lifted a shoulder. “Who knows?”
He took a step toward her, his face twisted with fury. “Someday I will—!”
She showed him the small pistol in her sewing bag. “Be careful, Federico. I do not like you very much.”
“You talk the fool.”
“When your mother died, Don Isidro provided for you, sent you to school, treated you as one of us.”
“And I hated you! All of you! Why should you have so much and me nothing?”
“What is so special about you, Federico? Is there any reason why you should have anything?”
He brushed it aside. “What is so special about you, then? Or Don Isidro?”
She poured tea into her cup. “Not very much, Federico. Really, not very much. In Spain we are of the nobility, but what is that? It means that we had an ancestor or two who were bold men, energetic men. One fought against the Moors and so became wealthy.
“He was a poor lad who helped a tanner with his hides, and when war came he proved a good man with a sword. He killed a Moor and took his armor, weapons, and horse. He took a gold chain from his neck and a ring from his finger. He captured another Moor, and the man was ransomed, and our ancestor was no longer a poor peón, but a young man of wealth.
“He rode his horse to war, and with the money from the ring which he sold, he hired several men-at-arms who followed him. He fought with great strength, and perhaps with great courage, and was made a noble. He married well and his son was a captain in the armada, commanding a warship. He was one of the few to bring his ship back intact. Largely, I think, because he avoided battle and fled to a safe harbor at the first sign of a storm. His grandson was a skillful manager of their estates, and what he inherited, he doubled.”
The Lonesome Gods (Louis L'Amour's Lost Treasures) Page 31