Read Trail of the Apache and Other Stories Page 12


  was stealing the herd! Swear to God, Em, I

  thought Perris told Jack to sell the herd. Please,

  Em—I—let me go and I’ll never show my face

  again. Please—”

  “You’ll never show it anyway where you’re going,” Gosh cracked.

  Earl Roach was looking at Butzy with a blank

  expression. His head turned to Jack, holding his

  chin up to ease his neck away from the chafe of the

  rope. “Who’s your friend?”

  Jack Ryan’s lips, with the cigarette hanging,

  formed a small smile at Roach. “Never saw him before in my life.” His young face was paler than

  usual, you could see it through beard and sunburn,

  but his voice was slow and even with that little edge

  of sarcasm it usually carried.

  Roach shook his head to drop the ash from his

  cigarette. “Beats me where he come from,” he said.

  Ben Templin swore in a slow whisper. He mumbled, “It’s a damn waste of good guts.”

  Lloyd and Ned and Dobie were looking at the

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  two of them like they couldn’t believe their eyes

  and then seemed to all drop their heads about the

  same time. Embarrassed. Like they didn’t rate to be

  in the same room with Jack and Earl. I felt it too,

  but felt a mad coming on along with it.

  “Dammit, Em! You’re going to wait for the

  deputy!” I knew I was talking, but it didn’t sound

  like me. “You’re going to wait for the deputy

  whether you like it or not!”

  Emmett just stared back and I felt like running

  for the door. Emmett stood there alone like a rock

  you couldn’t budge and then Ben Templin was beside him with his hand on Em’s arm, but not just

  resting it there, holding the forearm hard. His other

  hand was on his pistol butt.

  “Charlie’s right, Em,” Ben said. “I’m not sure

  how you got us this far, or why, but ain’t you or God

  Almighty going to hang those boys by yourself.”

  They stood there, those two big men, their faces

  not a foot apart, not telling a thing by their faces,

  but you got the feeling if one of them moved the livery would collapse like a twister hit it.

  Finally Emmett blinked his eyes, and moved his

  arm to make Ben let go.

  “All right, Ben.” It was just above a whisper

  and sounded tired. “We’ve all worked together a

  long time and have always agreed—if it was a case

  of letting you in on the agreeing. We won’t change

  it now.”

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  Gosh came out from behind the horses. Disappointed and mad. He moved right up close to Emmett. “You going to let this woman—”

  That was all he got a chance to say. Emmett

  swung his fist against that bony tobacco bulge and

  Gosh flattened against the board wall before sliding

  down into a heap.

  Emmett started to walk out the front and then he

  turned around. “We’re waiting on the deputy until

  tomorrow morning. If he don’t show by then, this

  party takes up where it left off.”

  He angled out the door toward the Senate House,

  still the boss. The hardheaded Irishman’s pride had

  to get the last word in whether he meant it or not.

  ✯ ✯ ✯

  The deputy got back late that night. You could see

  by his face that he hadn’t gotten what he’d gone

  for. Emmett stayed in his room at the Senate House,

  but Ben Templin and I were waiting at the jail when

  the deputy returned—though I don’t know what we

  would have done if he hadn’t—with two bottles of

  the yellowest mescal you ever saw to ease his saddle

  sores and dusty throat.

  We told him how we’d put three of our boys in

  his jail—just a scare, you understand—when they’d

  got drunk and thought it’d be fun to run off with a

  few head of stock. Just a joke on the owner, you

  understand. And Emmett Ryan, the ramrod, being

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  one of them’s brother, he had to act tougher than

  usual, else the boys’d think he was playing favorites. Like him always giving poor Jack the

  wildest broncs and making him ride drag on the

  trail drives.

  Em was always a little too serious, anyway. Of

  course, he was a good man, but he was a big, redfaced Irishman who thought his pride was a stone

  god to burn incense in front of. And hell, he had

  enough troubles bossing the TX crew without getting all worked up over his brother getting drunk

  and playing a little joke on the owners—you been

  drunk like that, haven’t you, Sheriff? Hell, everybody has. A sheriff with guts enough to work in

  Bill Bonney’s country had more to do than chase after drunk cowpokes who wouldn’t harm a fly. And

  even if they were serious, what’s a few cows to an

  outfit that owns a quarter million?

  And along about halfway down the second

  bottle— So why don’t we turn the joke around on

  old Em and let the boys out tonight? We done you a

  turn by getting rid of Joe Anthony. Old Em’ll wake

  up in the morning and be madder than hell when he

  finds out, and that will be some sight to see.

  The deputy could hardly wait.

  In the morning it was Ben who had to tell Em

  what happened. I was there in body only, with my

  head pounding like a pulverizer. The deputy didn’t

  show up at all.

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  We waited for Emmett to fly into somebody, but

  he just looked at us, from one to the next. Finally

  he turned toward the livery.

  “Let’s go take the cows home,” was all he said.

  Not an hour later we were looking down at the

  flats along the Pecos where the herd was. Neal

  Whaley was riding toward us.

  Emmett had been riding next to me all the way

  out from Anton Chico. When he saw Neal, he

  broke into a gallop to meet him, and that was when

  I thought he said, “Thanks, Charlie.”

  I know his head turned, but there was the beat of

  his horse when he started the gallop, and that

  mescal pounding at my brains. Maybe he said it

  and maybe he didn’t.

  Knowing that Irishman, I’m not going to ask him.

  5

  The Big Hunt

  It was a Sharps .50, heavy and cumbrous, but he

  was lying at full length downwind of the herd behind the rise with the long barrel resting on the

  hump of the crest so that the gun would be less tiring to fire.

  He counted close to fifty buffalo scattered over

  the grass patches, and his front sight roamed over

  the herd as he waited. A bull, its fresh winter hide

  glossy in the morning sun, strayed leisurely from

  the others, following thick patches of gamma grass.

  The Sharps swung slowly after the animal. And

  when the bull moved directly toward the rise, the

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  heavy rifle dipped over the crest so that the sight

  was just off the right shoulder. The young man,

  who was still not m
uch more than a boy, studied

  the animal with mounting excitement.

  “Come on, granddaddy . . . a little closer,” Will

  Gordon whispered. The rifle stock felt comfortable

  against his cheek, and even the strong smell of oiled

  metal was good. “Walk up and take it like a man,

  you ugly monster, you dumb, shaggy, ugly hulk of

  a monster. Look at that fresh gamma right in front

  of you. . . .”

  The massive head came up sleepily, as if it had

  heard the hunter, and the bull moved toward the rise.

  It was less than eighty yards away, nosing the grass

  tufts, when the Sharps thudded heavily in the crisp

  morning air.

  The herd lifted from grazing, shaggy heads turning lazily toward the bull sagging to its knees, but

  as it slumped to the ground the heads lowered unconcernedly. Only a few of the buffalo paused to

  sniff the breeze. A calf bawled, sounding nooooo in

  the open-plain stillness.

  Will Gordon had reloaded the Sharps, and he

  pushed it out in front of him as another buffalo lumbered over to the fallen bull, sniffing at the blood,

  nuzzling the bloodstained hide: and, when the head

  came up, nose quivering with scent, the boy

  squeezed the trigger. The animal stumbled a few

  yards before easing its great weight to the ground.

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  Don’t let them smell blood, he said to himself.

  They smell blood and they’re gone.

  He fired six rounds then, reloading the Sharps

  each time, though a loaded Remington rollingblock lay next to him. He fired with little hesitation, going to his side, ejecting, taking a cartridge

  from the loose pile at his elbow, inserting it in the

  open breech. He fired without squinting, calmly,

  killing a buffalo with each shot. Two of the animals

  lumbered on a short distance after being hit, glassy

  eyed, stunned by the shock of the heavy bullet. The

  others dropped to the earth where they stood.

  Sitting up now, he pulled a square of cloth from

  his coat pocket, opened his canteen, and poured

  water into the cloth, squeezing it so that it would

  become saturated. He worked the wet cloth

  through the eye of his cleaning rod, then inserted it

  slowly into the barrel of the Sharps, hearing a sizzle

  as it passed through the hot metal tube. He was

  new to the buffalo fields, but he had learned how

  an overheated gun barrel could put a man out of

  business. He had made sure of many things before

  leaving Leverette with just a two-man outfit.

  Pulling the rod from the barrel, he watched an

  old cow sniffing at one of the fallen bulls. Get that

  one quick . . . or you’ll lose a herd!

  He dropped the Sharps, took the Remington,

  and fired at the buffalo from a sitting position.

  Then he reloaded both rifles, but fired the Reming-The Big Hunt

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  ton a half-dozen more rounds while the Sharps

  cooled. Twice he had to hit with another shot to

  kill, and he told himself to take more time. Perspiration beaded his face, even in the crisp fall air, and

  burned powder was heavy in his nostrils, but he

  kept firing at the same methodical pace, because it

  could not last much longer, and there was not time

  to cool the barrels properly. He had killed close to

  twenty when the blood smell became too strong.

  The buffalo made rumbling noises in the thickness of their throats, and now three and four at a

  time would crowd toward those on the ground,

  sniffing, pawing nervously.

  A bull bellowed, and the boy fired again. The

  herd bunched, bumping each other, bellowing,

  shaking their clumsy heads at the blood smell. Then

  the leader broke suddenly, and what was left of the

  herd was off, from stand to dead run, in one moment of panic, driven mad by the scent of death.

  The boy fired into the dust cloud that rose behind them, but they were out of range before he

  could reload again.

  It’s better to wave them off carefully with a blanket after killing all you can skin, the boy thought to

  himself. But this had worked out all right. Sometimes it didn’t, though. Sometimes they stampeded

  right at the hunter.

  He rose stiffly, rubbing his shoulder, and moved

  back down the rise to his picketed horse. His shoul- 136

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  der ached from the buck of the heavy rifles, but he

  felt good. Lying back there on the plain was close

  to seventy or eighty dollars he’d split with Leo

  Cleary . . . soon as they’d been skinned and handed

  over to the hide buyers. Hell, this was easy. He

  lifted his hat, and the wind was cold on his sweatdampened forehead. He breathed in the air, feeling

  an exhilaration, and the ache in his shoulder didn’t

  matter one bit.

  Wait until he rode into Leverette with a wagon

  full of hides, he thought. He’d watch close, pretending he didn’t care, and he’d see if anybody

  laughed at him then.

  ✯ ✯ ✯

  He was mounting when he heard the wagon

  creaking in the distance, and he smiled when Leo

  Cleary’s voice drifted up the gradual rise, swearing

  at the team. He waited in the saddle, and swung

  down as the four horses and the canvas-topped

  wagon came up to him.

  “Leo, I didn’t even have to come wake you up.”

  Will Gordon smiled up at the old man on the box,

  and the smile eased the tight lines of his face. It was

  a face that seemed used to frowning, watching life

  turn out all wrong, a sensitive boyish face, but the

  set of his jaw was a man’s . . . or that of a boy who

  thought like a man. There were few people he

  showed his smile to other than Leo Cleary.

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  “That cheap store whiskey you brought run out,”

  Leo Cleary said. His face was beard stubbled, and

  the skin hung loosely seamed beneath tired eyes.

  “I thought you quit,” the boy said. His smile

  faded.

  “I have now.”

  “Leo, we got us a lot of money lying over that

  rise.”

  “And a lot of work. . . .” He looked back into

  the wagon, yawning. “We got near a full load we

  could take in . . . and rest up. You shooters think

  all the work’s in knocking ’em down.”

  “Don’t I help with the skinning?”

  Cleary’s weathered face wrinkled into a slow

  smile. “That’s just the old man in me coming out,”

  he said. “You set the pace, Will. All I hope is roaming hide buyers don’t come along . . . you’ll be

  wanting to stay out till April.” He shook his head.

  “That’s a mountain of back-breaking hours just to

  prove a point.”

  “You think it’s worth it or not?” the boy said

  angrily.

  Cleary just smiled. “Your dad would have liked

  to seen this,” he said. “Come on, let’s get those

  hides.”

  Skinning buffalo was filthy, back-straining work.

  Most hunters wouldn’t stoop to it. It was for men
r />
  hired as skinners and cooks, men who stayed by the

  wagons until the shooting was done.

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  During their four weeks on the range the boy did

  his share of the work, and now he and Leo Cleary

  went about it with little conversation. Will Gordon

  was not above helping with the butchering, with

  hides going for four dollars each in Leverette, three

  dollars if a buyer picked them up on the range.

  The more hides skinned, the bigger the profit.

  That was elementary. Let the professional hunters

  keep their pride and their hands clean while they

  sat around in the afternoon filling up on scootawaboo. Let them pay heavy for extra help just because skinning was beneath them. That was their

  business.

  In Leverette, when the professional hunters

  laughed at them, it didn’t bother Leo Cleary.

  Maybe they’d get hides, maybe they wouldn’t. Either way it didn’t matter much. When he thought

  about it, Leo Cleary believed the boy just wanted to

  prove a point—that a two-man outfit could make

  money—attributing it to his Scotch stubbornness.

  The idea had been Will’s dad’s—when he was

  sober. The old man had almost proved it himself.

  But whenever anyone laughed, the boy would

  feel that the laughter was not meant for him but for

  his father.

  Leo Cleary went to work with a frown on his

  grizzled face, wetting his dry lips disgustedly. He

  squatted up close to the nearest buffalo and with

  his skinning knife slit the belly from neck to tail.

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  He slashed the skin down the inside of each leg,

  then carved a strip from around the massive neck,

  his long knife biting at the tough hide close to the

  head. Then he rose, rubbing the back of his knife

  hand across his forehead.

  “Yo! Will . . .” he called out.

  The boy came over then, leading his horse and

  holding a coiled riata in his free hand. One end was

  secured to the saddle horn. He bunched the buffalo’s heavy neck skin, wrapping the free end of

  line around it, knotting it.

  He led the horse out the whole length of the rope,

  then mounted, his heels squeezing flanks as soon as

  he was in the saddle.

  “Yiiiiiii!” He screamed in the horse’s ear and