Reilly's Luck (1970) Read online

Page 2


  He stepped out into the brisk morning air and paused briefly in front of the hotel. Because of the early hour, there were few people about. He turned abruptly toward the store.

  Jess Elkins got up when Reilly walked in, and from the expression on his face Reilly knew that he himself had lately been under discussion.

  “I’ll need some warm clothes for the boy,” he told Elkins. “You have a nice town here, but it is cold this time of year.”

  “Yes, sir. He’s about four, isn’t he?”

  “He’s about five. Give me four sets, complete. And he’ll need a warm coat and a cap.”

  Elkins glanced up at him. “You sure you want to spend that much? After all, he isn’t your boy.”

  “In a sense he is.” Will Reilly was not one to hesitate over lying in a good cause, and it would give them something to worry about, something that might keep them in doubt until he could get away. “The boy is my nephew.”

  “Nephew?“Elkins was surprised. “But I thought—”

  “You thought he was Myra Cord’s boy? He is, of course, but his father was Andy Darrant, my half-brother. Andy asked me to care for the boy. That was why Van Clevern brought him to me.”

  He paid out the money, and gathered up the parcel and started for the door.

  “You’re Darrant’s half-brother? Why, I never—”

  “Be in tomorrow,” Reilly said. “There’s some other things I need for him. Tablets, pencils, and such.”

  He walked quickly back to the hotel, his boots crunching in the snow.

  It was very cold, too cold to be starting out in the snow on a long drive. And if it snowed any more the buckboard would be a handicap. But he had his own ideas about that, and when he reached the lobby he glanced around. It was empty, and there was no one at the desk. He walked right through to the back door.

  Art Loomis was coming in from the back. “Everything is ready, Will, but if I was you I’d hole up right here. It looks like more snow.”

  “Can’t be helped. The wolves are breathing down the back of my neck, Art.”

  “Ain’t you even waitin’ until dark?”

  “No. As you say, it may begin to snow. Art, if they come around asking questions tell them I said something about driving out to Schmitt’s to pick up some clothes for the boy.”

  It required only a few minutes to pack, and Loomis took the trunk down the back stairs himself. Then Reilly bundled Val into the seat and tucked a buffalo robe around him.

  “Good luck, Will,” Loomis said. “You’d better look sharp until you’re over the pass.”

  “Thanks.”

  “Will?” Art Loomis was staring at him. “Why,Will? Will you just tell me why?”

  Will Reilly looked at the horses’ backs for a moment and then he told the truth. “Art, I never had a kid. I never had anybody, never in my whole life. This is a fine boy, Art, and I figure he came to me for a reason.”

  He slapped the reins on the horses’ backs and the buckboard started off fast.

  He did not turn down the main street, but circled the livery barns and left by the back way. It was bitterly cold, and it was thirty miles to the nearest shelter of any kind.

  Chapter Two.

  The horses were grain-fed and strong, and in the intense cold they moved off at a good clip. Reilly glanced back only once. Somebody was standing in the street looking after them as they mounted the rise outside of town. When he had put three miles behind them, he drew up and broke open the package containing the boy’s clothing.

  “Put these on, Val. No, put them on right over what you’re wearing. Then get into this sheepskin coat.”

  It was wide-open country, without landmarks except for the trail left by the stage and several freight wagons. The ground was covered by only an inch or two of snow, but the temperature was hovering around ten below zero.

  He trotted the horses, walked them, trotted them again. From time to time as they went on he glanced back.

  Bunker was the kind of man to organize a pursuit, and the sheriff was under his thumb, but the sheriff was also a very lazy man who would have no desire to get out in the cold.

  Three hours, and perhaps twelve miles out of town, it began to snow. Only a few fine flakes at first, drifting slowly down. Then it began to fall faster and faster, and soon the horses were white with it.

  He was not more than fifteen miles out when the snow became so thick he could scarcely see. The going was heavier, and the horses slowed down. For some time they had been climbing steadily, and now they had left the flat land behind them and were in the low foothills.

  Reilly looked down at the boy. Val was awake and sitting up, peering into the snow.

  “Cold, Val?”

  “No, sir.”

  “We’re in trouble, Val. The snow is getting too deep for the buckboard, and the horses are tired. We’ll have to find a place to hole up until the storm is over.”

  “Is there a place?”

  “There’s an old cabin, if I can find it. It was off the road to the right, and among the trees. But that’s a few miles further on, almost at the top of the pass.”

  Val huddled in his warm clothes and the buffalo robe. Only his nose was cold, but he succeeded in keeping it back of the sheepskin collar most of the time. The horses were making hard work of it now. Several times they stopped and had to be whipped to make them move.

  “Have to do it, Val. If they stop here they’ll freeze, but they don’t know any better.”

  They were almost to the crest of the ridge and the wind was rising when the horses stopped again. Will Reilly got down from the buckboard and, taking them by the bridles, he led them on.

  Once, screened from the worst of the wind and snow by a wall of pines, he came back to the buckboard.

  “How are you making it, boy?” he asked. “Are you all right?”

  “Yes, sir. Can I help?”

  “Just stay warm. And Val, remember this. If you stop pushing on, you lose. If we keep going, there will be shelter. It is always a little further to the top than you think.”

  For what seemed like a long while they plodded on. They seemed to be lost in time; in the blowing snow there was no perspective, no way of judging time or space, for they moved inside a whirl of blowing snow in a white world where most of the time Val could not even see Will Reilly.

  Finally Reilly took an abrupt turn. For a moment the buckboard canted sharply and Val hung on, wildly afraid that it would tumble over. But the buckboard righted itself and they were out of the wind behind a shoulder of the mountain.

  For thirty or forty yards they had clear going on a ridge that fell away on both sides and was blown free of snow. Then they were under the trees, in a thick stand of timber.

  Reilly came back to Val. “You’ll have to sit tight. If you see me go on ahead, you stay right in the seat. The old Ebbens’ cabin is just up ahead, but if we don’t make it soon the trail will be blocked.”

  Reilly moved back and forth across the road, trampling down the snow where it was too deep, then leading the horses on.

  Suddenly a black bulk of rock showed before them, and close to it a slanting roof and a doorway. Surprisingly, a thin trail of smoke rose from the chimney.

  Will Reilly stared at it, then with numbed fingers he unbuttoned his coat. Tucking his right hand into his armpit, he warmed his fingers while Val watched curiously.

  Why didn’t they go on, he thought. It would be warm inside the house, and he was cold now, especially his toes. After a few minutes Reilly walked on. He did not go right to the door, but veered off along a beaten path that led to a stable. He opened the door and went inside. When he came out he walked back to the buckboard.

  “Val,” he spoke quietly, “I don’t want you to be afraid now. There are some men in there, and they may be outlaws. No matter what happens to me, you be friendly with them and they will take care of you. There are mighty few men who wouldn’t be good to a little boy.

  “There are three of them. Probably I
will know them when I see them. They may even try to rob me, but you’ll be in a warm place, and we haven’t any choice. I’ll put the horses up first.” He started off, but paused and looked back. “Don’t worry too much, Val,” he said. He slapped his waistband. “I can handle this sort of thing pretty good.”

  He drove on to the stable through the steadily falling snow, and Val watched as Reilly stripped the harness from the horses, and then rubbed them down with care.

  “Always take care of your horses first, Val,” he said. “You never know when you may need them in their best shape.” He flexed his fingers a few times. “All right, let’s go see what kind of a hand we’ve drawn.”

  Their arrival had been muffled by the snow, which covered and banked the cabin. Reilly’s knock brought sudden silence within. He pounded on the door. “Open up in there! It’s cold! I’ve got a boy out here.”

  There was the sound of a bar being removed, then the door swung inward. Will Reilly pushed the door back further and walked in, holding Val’s hand in his left one, then releasing it.

  He pushed the door shut behind him, still facing the three men who sat around the room. They stared at Reilly, then at Val.

  “Looks like I drew a pat hand,” Reilly said quietly. “Val, this is the Tensleep Kid. He’s one half Irish, one quarter Dutch, one quarter Sioux Indian, and he’s four quarters bad. But he’s a strong man and he’s honest with his friends.”

  Tensleep chuckled. “I’m not all bad, kid. I got a liking for kids and gamblers.” He looked up at Reilly. “How’d you find this place, Will?”

  “I grubstaked Ebbens a couple of times.”

  “Anybody else know of it?”

  “I doubt it. Ebbens wasn’t a talking man, you’ll recall.”

  “It’s mighty cold to be travelin’,” one of the others said. “Maybe you’d like to tell us how come?”

  “This is Myra’s boy. Van left him with me when they skipped town, and the sky pilot down there was going to take him away from me. I like the boy, and I don’t like Dunker.”

  The man was heavyset, with powerful shoulders. “I don’t buy it,” he said, looking hard at Reilly, “and I don’t like you.”

  “Your privilege, Sonnenberg. I don’t like you, either.”

  “Then get out.”

  “No.” Val was afraid of that thick, bearded man, but when he looked at Will he saw his friend was smiling. Will Reilly was not afraid. “We’re staying, Henry.”

  Sonnenberg started to rise, but Tensleep’s voice cut the movement short. “Let him stay, Hank. We’d put no man out on a night like this, would we, Tom?”

  The third man was tall and lank. He looked around lazily, “No, we wouldn’t. Forget it, Hank.”

  Sonnenberg swore. “How do we know he ain’t a spy?”

  “Reilly?” Tensleep chuckled. “Reilly’s a gambler.”

  There were bunks enough. The outlaws had added bunks when they chose the place, and Ebbens had had several in the beginning. He had always planned to hire help.

  “We’ll leave when the storm is over,” Reilly said. “I’ll make some runners for the buckboard.”

  “I don’t like you, Reilly,” Sonnenberg said again. “I never did.”

  “Nobody asked you to, Henry. I’ll try to keep out of your way, and you keep out of mine.”

  “Or … ?”

  Will Reilly smiled. “I can shoot as quick and as accurately as any man in this room … and it’s a small room.”

  “He’s right, Hank,” Tensleep said. “I’ve seen him shoot. I’ve also seen him use a bowie. I saw him carve three men into ribbons before they could get off a shot … and they were sent to the table to get him.”

  Henry Sonnenberg looked thoughtfully at Reilly. “Well, now, maybe I underrated you. Maybe you’re better than I thought.”

  “It’s kind of close in here,” Reilly said. “I think we’d both get hurt, Henry.”

  The heavy man stared at him with reluctant admiration. “All right. You got nerve. Only don’t cross me.”

  Val had edged close to the fire. He was beginning to get warm all the way through. Though he had not admitted it to Will Reilly, he had been cold for hours. He was still afraid of these men, although Tensleep smiled at him.

  “I didn’t know Myra had a kid,” Tom said suddenly.

  “Nobody did. She kept still about it and the Schmitts cared for him until Emma died. Then Myra told Van to get rid of him.”

  They were shocked, and showed it.

  “That’s right,” Reilly continued, “only Van wasn’t up to it. So he brought him to me to keep overnight, then they skipped out.”

  “I knew Myra had a streak of mean,” Tensleep said, “but akid ! She’d do that to a kid?”

  “She’s a strange one,” Tom said, and added, surprisingly, “I knew her family.”

  Reilly glanced at him. “Where was this?”

  “Back east. She came of good people … well-off. But she was always a mean one. She skipped out and never did go back.”

  When Val woke up the cabin was light and he was lying on a bunk with blankets tucked around him. Tensleep was sitting by the fire with his feet propped up on a stump that did duty for a chair. He glanced over when Val moved. “Mornin’, boy. When you get right down to it you’re an almighty good sleeper, you know that?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Sir. Now that’s right nice. Who taught you manners, boy?”

  “Mr. Van did, sir.”

  “Well, I reckon he was good for something, after all. But a pleasant man, too, a right pleasant man. I never did talk to anyone who was easier with words … unless it was Will Reilly. You got a friend there, boy. You stick to him. A man never has many friends in this life and he had better hold onto them.”

  “You have friends.”

  Tensleep chuckled dryly, and gave Val a quick, sidelong glance tinged with ironic humor. “Yeah? You might call ‘em that. We work together, boy, and they’re good at what they do, but I was talkin’ of friends you can turn your back on.”

  “Mr. Reilly likes you.”

  “Reilly does? Now, why do you say that, boy?”

  “I can tell by the way he talks to you and looks at you. He likes you, all right.”

  “I’m honored. Will Reilly is a man sparing of his likes. And what about you, boy?”

  “Yes, sir. I like you.”

  “How about Hank? An’ Tom?”

  “I don’t like Hank … Henry. I don’t think he likes me, either. I don’t know about Tom.”

  “Nobody knows about Tom. Not even Tom.” He got up and added wood to the fire. “You keep shut about your likes an’ dislikes, boy. Though I don’t s’pose it will make much dif’rence, one way or t’other.”

  The snow had stopped, but outside the window, which he could scarcely see through because of the frost, everything was white and still. He could hear an axe being used, and from time to time the sound of voices. He could see big chips lying on the snow, and a couple of long poles, curved on one end. Will Reilly had chosen young saplings with a slight curvature for the runners. Now he was trimming them to smooth the surface that would ride on the snow.

  Sonnenberg, Tom, and Reilly wheeled the buckboard into view and Reilly went to work to remove the wheels. The buckboard had been built so that runners could be mounted for winter use.

  After a while they all came in. Tom went to work preparing a meal, and Reilly tilted his chair back against the wall. “I’ve got some extra grub,” he said, “and we’re obliged for your help. If you stay here until you get a chinook, or spring comes, you’ll need more than you’ve got.”

  “It would help,” Tensleep agreed.

  “I can leave you a couple of slabs of bacon, some frozen beef, maybe half a dozen cans of beans. We didn’t pack flour because we didn’t figure to have any place to bake.”

  “See?” Tensleep said. “I told you he was all right. You never lose anything if you stand by Will Reilly.”

  Reilly drank coff
ee, and then nodded to Val. “Get bundled up, Val. We’re pulling out.”

  “You got a long drive.” Sonnenberg studied him warily. “How do we know you ain’t just goin’ out to meet the sheriff some place?”

  “If you knew Daily Benson,” Reilly answered, “you wouldn’t worry. You couldn’t get him three miles from town in this weather for twenty thousand dollars. He’s a warm-weather sheriff … and he isn’t looking for you boys, anyhow.”

  Reilly put down his cup and got to his feet. “Come on out, a couple of you, and I’ll give you what I can.”

  Outside he loaded Sonnenberg down with the bacon and beans, and while the outlaw went inside, Reilly said, “Thanks, Tensleep, I’ll remember this.” He dug into the buckboard and came up with a ten-pound sack of dried apples. “Take this for an added benefit.”

  “Thanks.” Tensleep started to turn away, then came back. “I just recalled, Will. You be careful down to Helena. The Gorman boys are down there.”

  Henry Sonnenberg stood by sullenly, but Tom stepped forward and picking up Val, placed him in the buckboard, and tucked the buffalo robe around him. “You ride warm, son. You’ve got a cold drive ahead of you.”

  “Thank you, Tom,” Val said. “Thank you very much.”

  Will Reilly stepped up into the buckboard and sat down, then he clucked to the horses and slapped them with the reins. “You boys take care,” he said. “And scatter some snow after I’m gone.”

  He drove down the trail toward the main road, and Val saw his coat was still unbuttoned and the flap loose on Reilly’s holster. Will Reilly was a gambler, they said, but he did not gamble in every sense, and it was only when they had put two good miles behind them that he buttoned his coat.

  For a few miles they rode in silence, and then Will glanced down at the boy. “Are you cold?” he asked.

  “A little.”

  “Did you watch what happened back there, Val? It is always important to watch … and listen.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Do you know why we’re alive now, Val?”

 

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