Conagher (1969) Read online

Page 11


  Bitter cold and frozen snow kept even th e horses from finding grass beneath th e snow's surface. Unless there was gras s soon she would lose the few calves sh e had.

  But there was no sign of green. It wa s the time when the sun should be warmin g the soil, it was the time for rains, but ther e was neither sun nor rain.

  The food that had been left her b y Conagher more than two months ago wa s gone. The stage had stopped once, with a broken wheel to be mended, and fortunatel y there had been enough food the n to feed the passengers. She had a littl e money from that, but she hesitated to tr y the long trip to the Plaza with the horses i n their present condition.

  And both of the children were thin.

  Laban had shot a couple of squirrels, bu t there was scarcely a bit of meat on either , and now they were in serious trouble. Th e flour was gone, the sugar was gone. Wit h the last of the bacon grease she had frie d slices of bread for the children.

  She knew she should kill one of th e calves, but she had never butchered a n animal and had not the slightest idea o f how to go about it. Moreover, she hated t o lose even one of her small herd. But it ha d come to that.

  Twice she had planned to flag down th e stage and get McCloud or Logan to brin g her something from town, but each tim e she had missed the stage. This mornin g she was going out early, to be waitin g beside the road when it came.

  Much of the carefully hoarded mone y from feeding the stage passengers wa s already spent. She had needed a coat fo r Laban and mittens for all of them.

  Far to the south Conagher saddled up an d rode out. He had seen nothing of Parnell , and believed the lot of them had, fo r the time at least, left the country. Ther e had been stage holdups on the roa d into Tucson, there had been others o n the Black Canyon trail between Phoeni x and Prescott. There had been a blood y attempt on the stage in the mountain s near the Colorado, on the road to Hardyville.

  Conagher swung wide now, checkin g for grass. There was none. Melting sno w had frozen, and the stock could not brea k through. He opened up several wate r holes, found in a sheltered canyon som e stock that was doing well, and then saw a patch of green up a canyon he had neve r entered.

  He turned and started up the canyon , hoping to find grass. He had gone no mor e than half a mile when suddenly he saw, of f to one side, dirt churned by the hoofs o f shod horses. It was fresh ... it ha d probably happened that morning. He swung his horse just an instant before th e bullet struck.

  He felt the slam of a bullet into his bac k and heard the report of the rifle as h e toppled from the saddle. He fell, struc k the ground on his shoulder, and rolle d over. His horse went dashing on, and h e knew instantly that they would be dow n here after him.

  Fortunately he had carried his rifle i n his right hand, hoping for a shot at a dee r or antelope.

  He caught the rifle up from the ground , and even as he heard a thundering o f hoofs, he rolled over a slab of rock and sli d a dozen feet to the bottom, where h e crawled into a hole made by one roc k toppled against another.

  He scrambled through here quickly an d down a steep dry watercourse, where h e saw an opening and ducked into it. It wa s only a small space between rocks.

  Behind him he heard a shout . He's wounded, Smoke! We got him !

  For the first time he remembered tha t he had been knocked from the saddle by a shot. He was wounded then, and ther e must have been some blood. No doubt h e was numbed from the shock, which mean t that it would not be long before he woul d feel the pain, and perhaps would not b e able to go any farther.

  Before him was a tilted slab of roc k shaped like a rooster's comb. He would b e exposed on the face of it, but they wer e still out of sight around the corner, an d there was a way a man might go where th e face of the rock met the talus slope that fel l away for several hundred feet. Grippin g his rifle, he started to run. In an instant hi s brief respite was gone and the wound wa s throbbing with pain.

  But he made it halfway along, an d suddenly saw a place where two slabs o f rock overlapped. The opening, which wa s V-shaped, was filled with stiff, wiry brus h covered with thorns.

  He had no choice. He could hear the m coming, and once they rounded the roc k back there he would be a clear target , caught against the face of the rock, a targe t that could scarcely be missed, in a plac e where there was no shelter. He dived a t the stiff brush, fighting frantically to ge t past it.

  Luckily, he had thrown himself on to p of the brush, so he was squirming over i t rather than trying to get through, whic h would have been almost impossible. He squirmed and scrambled, his breat h coming in hoarse gasps of mingled pai n and fear. Then he got hold of a larg e branch, and swung himself over into th e space beyond, where he fell panting to th e ground.

  He lay there, stunned, his breath stil l coming raggedly, and for several minute s he could scarcely think.

  When he looked around, he foun d himself in a sort of natural cup within a cluster of ragged peaks. It looked almos t like a volcanic crater, though it was not.

  There was not more than an acre o f ground in the bottom of the hollow, with a thick covering of green grass. Against on e wall there were some trees, and he coul d hear water rippling.

  Painfully, he crawled across the littl e basin to the stream. The water was clea r and cold.

  He drank, and then lay on the groun d beside the stream, where he must hav e passed out. When he awoke he was ver y cold, the sun had gone, and it was almos t dark.

  Despite the cold, he lay there trying t o quiet the chattering of his teeth. He listened but he heard nothing. Using th e rifle as a crutch, he pushed himself up an d half staggered, half fell into the edge of th e trees.

  After a few moments he began to gathe r some sticks together. Did he dare build a fire? There seemed little likelihood tha t the flames could be seen, and as for smoke , it was already night, and the chances wer e small.

  With trembling fingers he shredde d bark, added twigs, and lit a small fire, t o which he then added some large twigs.

  The light cheered him, and the warmt h felt good.

  Carefully, he looked all around him.

  The rock wall of one of the pinnacles wa s at his back, trees and brush were aroun d him, and the basin, so far as he could see , was empty.

  Thinking back, he recalled the twiste d way he had come, and how he ha d emerged along the face of the jagged rock.

  No rider could have reached that place , and, looking up from below, they coul d not have seen the break between th e overlapping rocks.

  So he had vanished.

  Would they come back in the mornin g to look? It was possible, even likely. Bu t from here he could control the opening , and nobody was going to get in a s long as ammunition and strength held out.

  With careful fingers he felt of his bac k and found a deep gouge where a bullet, o r a fragment of one, had entered the fles h slightly above his hipbone and had cu t through the flesh along his ribs, jus t nicking the thick muscle before going off.

  It was a painful wound, but not a seriou s one. He had lost blood, and it was going t o hurt when he moved, for his side was badl y bruised, and possibly some ribs wer e broken, though they did not feel like it.

  The bullet must have glanced up fro m the cantle of his saddle. The cold an d perhaps the thickness of his woole n underwear and shirt had stopped th e bleeding for the time being.

  He had no coffee, nothing. He drank a little water heated in a dish he made fro m bark, an old trick he had often used. Th e flames heated the water but did not bur n the bark as long as they only touched i t below the water level. The water insid e absorbed the heat.

  The hot water helped to warm him, an d then he dug out a place among the leave s and pine needles, cowered deep within hi s sheepskin coat, and went to sleep.

  He awoke shivering in the cold morning , with the last stars solitary in the vas t darkness. He started to sit up, felt a twing e of pain, and lay still again. He was going t o have the devil's own time of it, he
coul d see that. He was miles from the ST h eadquarters, without a horse, withou t food, and wounded. Although the calenda r said this was a month of spring, th e weather gave no indication of it, and eve n a tenderfoot would have known he was i n serious trouble.

  After some struggle he got his fire goin g again. Fortunately there were a good man y dry branches lying around, and there wer e the remains of a fallen tree and some pin e cones. He could reach enough fuel to kee p his fire going for some time withou t moving around too much. Once the flame s leaped up, he eased himself into a sittin g position, favoring his wounded side.

  The effort left him gasping, and he sa t still, letting the fire warm him, an d reaching for an occasional stick.

  If they came back they might find him , but they might not. The snow was gon e from the top of the talus slope along whic h he had come, and the ground was frozen.

  He might have left no tracks on that froze n ground.

  They might find some broken twig s where he had forced a way over the brush , but even that was a question. But did the y need to find him at all? They knew he wa s wounded, they knew the cold was no t over, and they knew how small is th e chance of a wounded man, who has los t blood, in fighting off the cold.

  They only needed to keep him bottle d up here. They did not need to find him , and to run the risk of coming in after him , which would be like going into a den afte r a bear. They could just ride a patro l around the area and be sure he did no t leave it.

  Smoke Parnell had been out there. An d the voice he had heard had sounded lik e that of Tile Coker . . . both tough men.

  When he was warm enough to take a n interest in his hideout, he looked aroun d and assayed his situation. So far as h e could see, there was only one opening, th e one through which he had gained access.

  Because of the sheltered position, the gras s had already begun to turn green, and ther e were leaf buds on the cottonwoods. On th e far side of the hollow, where the su n reached only briefly, the snow had froze n into a bank of ice.

  There was fuel enough at hand for som e time, there was shelter in some of th e rocky overhangs and there might be herb s with which he could treat his wounds.

  Using his left hand, he caught hold of a branch and pulled himself erect. Prowlin g along the slope, he found some cliff rose, a resinous, strong-smelling plant, sometime s called quinine bush. It was a plan t important as winter browse for deer , cattle, and sheep; and judging by remnant s he had found in caves, Conagher kne w that the primitive pre-Indian peoples ha d used to braid the bark into sandals, rope , and mats. The Hopis used the wood fo r making arrows, but what was importan t for Conagher at the moment was tha t they used the plant to make a wash fo r wounds.

  He gathered some of the bark, leaves , and smaller twigs and began to heat the lo t in his improvised bark dish. When it ha d boiled, he stripped and, using his bandan a and taking his time, bathed his woun d with the decoction, his sheepskin over hi s shoulders to keep him from getting to o chilled.

  Whether it did any good he was no t sure, although he knew that the Hopi s swore by it. After that he wandered about , found some dry spectacle pod, crushed i t to powder, and put it on the wound , another remedy used by both the Hop i and Tewa Indians.

  After an hour or so of lying beside th e fire, he began to think more about food.

  Conagher was a man who had often misse d meals. Going hungry was not a ne w experience, though not a pleasant one, bu t food was a necessity now if he was t o recover and regain the strength it woul d take to get him out of this situation.

  Animals and birds must know of thi s place, he thought. Men, if they had eve r discovered it, had left no signs here. But i f animals came here, he should be able t o trap or kill one for food.

  After a time he got up and moved hi s camp to the overhang. This had th e advantage of bringing him within range o f a new supply of fuel. Sitting by the fire, h e carefully studied the plants within rang e of his eyes. Meanwhile he chewed on a couple of leaves from the salt bush. Ho w much food value they possessed he had n o idea, but they gave him the satisfaction o f chewing and the taste was pleasant.

  He was very thirsty and went often t o the stream to drink. He saw rabbi t droppings near the water and the tracks o f several small animals in the sand near th e stream.

  After a while he lay down again, feelin g very tired. It was only with an effort tha t he could replenish his fire, but he kept i t alive. The wood was dry and gave of f almost no smoke.

  He slept, but awoke suddenly, feelin g the chill of night. Evening had come an d his fire had burned itself down to gray ash.

  Only one small branch still glowed. He fe d it gingerly with tiny bits of shredded bark , then with twigs.

  Conagher stripped off his shirt and , hanging the coat over his shoulders fo r warmth, bathed his wound again with ho t water and cliff rose, then powdered it wit h the crushed spectacle pod.

  After he put on his clothes he walke d with great care down to the bank of th e stream. In the brush close by he rigged a couple of snares, and then went over to th e notch through which he had crawled.

  Peering out, he could see only a patch o f sky, and below it the darkness where th e earth lay, the valley below the rim wher e he had taken refuge.

  Kneeling down, he began with hi s bowie knife to cut the brush away so tha t he could tunnel through to the other side.

  He would work a few minutes, then stop t o rest and to listen. Once he believed h e heard movement, but when he continue d to listen for a long time there was n o further sound. After a while, havin g scarcely made a dent in the clump o f brush, he went back to his camp, adde d fuel to the fire, and lay down, huddling a s much of him as possible under th e sheepskin coat.

  He slept, dreaming wild dreams, and h e awoke in a cold sweat. His side hurt hi m and he wanted to change his sleepin g position, but every movement hurt, so h e lay quiet listening to the leaves whisperin g and the subtle movements of smal l creatures. When morning came his snare s were empty.

  On this day he chewed some of th e leaves from the salt bush, drank wate r from the stream, slept, and woke again. He found and ate some juniper berries, an d rigged another snare.

  In the night he awoke, built up the fire , and huddled near it with the back wall o f the overhang as a reflector that threw th e heat back toward him. His head ached an d he was very tired, but he did not feel lik e sleeping. He heated water, crushed som e of the juniper berries into it, and drank th e liquid. He had heard that the Hopi s sometimes made a tea from junipe r berries. After a while he slept again, an d when he awoke it was raining.

  For a time he huddled over his fire, hi s feeling of irritation growing. Finally h e lurched to his feet, moved everythin g inflammable away from the fire, and takin g his rifle, went back to the opening.

  Listening, he heard nothing. Then h e hacked at the wall of thorny brush until a partial opening was made. He had starte d to go through, then stopped, went bac k and tore down his empty snares. He wanted nothing to be trapped there to di e uselessly.

  He forced his way through the brush , paused, and listened, but he heard nothin g except the soft fall of rain.

  Weak though he was, he had decide d that to stay here longer would only mea n that he would grow weaker. He worked hi s way along the comb-like ridge, and foun d a place where he could climb down slowl y and painfully.

  Off?to the right he saw what seemed t o be the glow of a fire, and he started towar d it. He needed food and he needed a horse , and he would be damned if he was going t o go without them when his enemiesi f that was who they werehad both.

  Judging by the stars, it was pas t midnight when he came close to the fire. I t was burning brightly under a crudel y made shelter.

  First he noted where the horses wer e tied, and then he saw his own horse ther e among them. Evidently they had foun d the horse running loose on the prairie, an d had roped and kept it.

  He looked around the camp. There wer e three men there, two of them
in their beds , sleeping; the other was dozing beside th e fire.

  Conn Conagher was weak as a cat, bu t he was mad clear through. He had a bitte r anger that drove him recklessly, and he di d not hesitate. He walked right into th e camp, kicked the rifle away from the hand s of the man who dozed, and put a bulle t into the ground between the two sleepin g men.

  One of them was young Curly Scott, th e other was Smoke Parnell himself. Th e man by the fire was Pete Casuse.

  The two sleeping men jerked erect an d Conagher held the gun on them . Dam n you, Smoke , he said, if I wasn't weak a s a cat I'd beat you within an inch of you r life. Now you lay right there, and yo u make a move, even to scratch, and so hel p me, I'll put a bullet in your belly.

  You, he said to Casuse , dish up a plate of that grub, and hurry .

  Si. Casuse started to rise.

  Stay where you are. Just reach ove r and ladle it up, and use your right hand. I never shot a man who wasn't holding iron , but right now I just don't give a damn .

  He lowered his rifle, slid his six-gun int o his hand, and proceeded to feed himsel f with his left hand.

  I hope you try something , he sai d grimly . I just hope you do. I'd like t o bury the three of you right on this spot.

  Now, Smoke, he said , I'm going t o ride out of here. You boys are then goin g to get up and leave the country, and if yo u stop this side of Tascosa or Trinidad , you're crazier than I think you are. You'v e had your try at me and you failed, but as o f noon tomorrow I'm hunting you, and I'm going to shoot on sight, without an y warning whatsoever. I am going to rid e your sign until you've killed me or I've pu t lead in all of you .

  Parnell stared at him . You're loco!

  You're plumb, completely loco !

  Maybe . . . but you've given me grief , and I'll take no more from any man. Al l I'm going to give you is a running start .

  He finished the plate of food and thre w down the plate, then he drank three cup s of coffee. Parnell made a slight move, and a bullet burned his shoulder.

 

    Last Stand at Papago Wells (1957) Read onlineLast Stand at Papago Wells (1957)the Trail to Crazy Man (1986) Read onlinethe Trail to Crazy Man (1986)Shalako (1962) Read onlineShalako (1962)West from Singapore (Ss) (1987) Read onlineWest from Singapore (Ss) (1987)Last Of the Breed (1986) Read onlineLast Of the Breed (1986)Dark Canyon (1963) Read onlineDark Canyon (1963)Bendigo Shafter (1979) Read onlineBendigo Shafter (1979)Riding for the Brand (Ss) (1986) Read onlineRiding for the Brand (Ss) (1986)Guns Of the Timberlands (1955) Read onlineGuns Of the Timberlands (1955)the Iron Marshall (1979) Read onlinethe Iron Marshall (1979)the Broken Gun (1967) Read onlinethe Broken Gun (1967)the Rider Of Ruby Hills (1986) Read onlinethe Rider Of Ruby Hills (1986)Rowdy Rides to Glory (1987) Read onlineRowdy Rides to Glory (1987)the First Fast Draw (1959) Read onlinethe First Fast Draw (1959)Utah Blain (1984) Read onlineUtah Blain (1984)the Quick and the Dead (1983) Read onlinethe Quick and the Dead (1983)Tucker (1971) Read onlineTucker (1971)with These Hands (Ss) (2002) Read onlinewith These Hands (Ss) (2002)May There Be a Road (Ss) (2001) Read onlineMay There Be a Road (Ss) (2001)Night Over the Solomons (Ss) (1986) Read onlineNight Over the Solomons (Ss) (1986)the Haunted Mesa (1987) Read onlinethe Haunted Mesa (1987)Matagorda (1967) Read onlineMatagorda (1967)End Of the Drive (Ss) (1997) Read onlineEnd Of the Drive (Ss) (1997)Riders Of the Dawn (1980) Read onlineRiders Of the Dawn (1980)the Key-Lock Man (1965) Read onlinethe Key-Lock Man (1965)Taggart (1959) Read onlineTaggart (1959)Crossfire Trail (1953) Read onlineCrossfire Trail (1953)Education Of a Wandering Man (1990) Read onlineEducation Of a Wandering Man (1990)the Proving Trail (1979) Read onlinethe Proving Trail (1979)Kilrone (1966) Read onlineKilrone (1966)the Man from Skibbereen (1973) Read onlinethe Man from Skibbereen (1973)the Tall Stranger (1982) Read onlinethe Tall Stranger (1982)Bowdrie (Ss) (1983) Read onlineBowdrie (Ss) (1983)Catlow (1963) Read onlineCatlow (1963)the Strong Shall Live (Ss) (1980) Read onlinethe Strong Shall Live (Ss) (1980)Fallon (1963) Read onlineFallon (1963)the Empty Land (1969) Read onlinethe Empty Land (1969)the Cherokee Trail (1982) Read onlinethe Cherokee Trail (1982)Beyond the Great Snow Mountains (Ss) (1999) Read onlineBeyond the Great Snow Mountains (Ss) (1999)Kid Rodelo (1966) Read onlineKid Rodelo (1966)Valley Of the Sun (Ss) (1995) Read onlineValley Of the Sun (Ss) (1995)Radigan (1958) Read onlineRadigan (1958)Law Of the Desert Born (Ss) (1984) Read onlineLaw Of the Desert Born (Ss) (1984)Chancy (1968) Read onlineChancy (1968)the Burning Hills (1956) Read onlinethe Burning Hills (1956)Son Of a Wanted Man (1984) Read onlineSon Of a Wanted Man (1984)Killoe (1962) Read onlineKilloe (1962)Showdown On the Hogback (1991) Read onlineShowdown On the Hogback (1991)the Shadow Riders (1982) Read onlinethe Shadow Riders (1982)to Tame a Land (1955) Read onlineto Tame a Land (1955)Brionne (1968) Read onlineBrionne (1968)Off the Mangrove Coast (Ss) (2000) Read onlineOff the Mangrove Coast (Ss) (2000)Showdown at Yellow Butte (1983) Read onlineShowdown at Yellow Butte (1983)How the West Was Won (1963) Read onlineHow the West Was Won (1963)Smoke from This Altar (1990) Read onlineSmoke from This Altar (1990)Comstock Lode (1981) Read onlineComstock Lode (1981)Flint (1960) Read onlineFlint (1960)Hondo (1953) Read onlineHondo (1953)Reilly's Luck (1970) Read onlineReilly's Luck (1970)No Trouble for the Cactus Kid Read onlineNo Trouble for the Cactus KidBowdrie's Law (Ss) (1983) Read onlineBowdrie's Law (Ss) (1983)the Sackett Companion (1992) Read onlinethe Sackett Companion (1992)the Man Called Noon (1970) Read onlinethe Man Called Noon (1970)Buckskin Run (Ss) (1981) Read onlineBuckskin Run (Ss) (1981)Down the Long Hills (1968) Read onlineDown the Long Hills (1968)Kiowa Trail (1964) Read onlineKiowa Trail (1964)Long Ride Home (Ss) (1989) Read onlineLong Ride Home (Ss) (1989)Lonigan (Ss) (1988) Read onlineLonigan (Ss) (1988)Dutchmans Flat (Ss) (1986) Read onlineDutchmans Flat (Ss) (1986)Passin' Through (1985) Read onlinePassin' Through (1985)the Hills Of Homicide (Ss) (1987) Read onlinethe Hills Of Homicide (Ss) (1987)Silver Canyon (1956) Read onlineSilver Canyon (1956)the Californios (1974) Read onlinethe Californios (1974)Where the Long Grass Blows (1976) Read onlineWhere the Long Grass Blows (1976)Callaghen (1972) Read onlineCallaghen (1972)Under the Sweetwater Rim (1971) Read onlineUnder the Sweetwater Rim (1971)the Lonesome Gods (1983) Read onlinethe Lonesome Gods (1983)Heller with a Gun (1955) Read onlineHeller with a Gun (1955)Hanging Woman Creek (1964) Read onlineHanging Woman Creek (1964)High Lonesome (1962) Read onlineHigh Lonesome (1962)There's Always a Trail (1984) Read onlineThere's Always a Trail (1984)the High Graders (1965) Read onlinethe High Graders (1965)Conagher (1969) Read onlineConagher (1969)from the Listening Hills (Ss) (2004) Read onlinefrom the Listening Hills (Ss) (2004)Monument Rock (Ss) (1998) Read onlineMonument Rock (Ss) (1998)