the Proving Trail (1979) Read online

Page 4


  And pa could shoot. I'd seen him shoot, and h e was good, better than many a man who carried a reputation as a gunfighter.

  When I came down off the mountain, it was to a strange town. There was a church there, because I see n its steeple from afar, and there was a double row o f storefronts and a scattering of houses.

  There were three two-story buildings, a store, th e bank, and one with a sign that said Hotel.

  There was a plump, white-haired woman dustin g when I came in. She went behind the counter an d looked at me with a wary eye. I had on pa's black hat , which fitted, my blanket poncho, and those run-dow n boots. I hadn't shaved in several days and must hav e looked like the wrath of God.

  "Room will be two bits," she said, "two bits eac h night, payable in advance. Four bits if you want a bath."

  I grinned at her, and her face lit up. She smile d back, friendly-like. "I'll want a room for two nights a t least," I said, "and definitely a bath. I been riding som e rough country."

  "You look it," she said cheerfully.

  So I dug down and come up with a dollar, which I g ave her. "Hungry?" she asked.

  "I could eat a wolf," I said.

  'We're fresh out of wolves," she said, "but we go t us a cougar."

  "All right," I said, "I never et cougar but I'm up t o it." I thought she was funnin' me, but she wasn't. No t a-tall.

  "My pappy was a mountain man," she said, "and h e had the pick of the finest meat in the West, just for th e shooting. He always rated cougar meat the best ther e was. After that come beaver tail and buffalo tongue."

  "Bring on your cougar," I said. "Just be sure he's declawed and defanged, 'cause I'm a mite tuckered."

  "Bath first?"

  I just looked at her. "All right, all right, you can ea t first." She indicated a door. "Right through that door , and don't go to makin' sheep's eyes at the waitress.

  She's my niece and she's seen a sheep."

  Chapter IV

  A man should always bathe before he eats. I didn't , and that choice got me into more trouble than yo u could shake a stick at.

  I mean had I gone upstairs and had a hot bath, tha t man wouldn't have been in the restaurant when I wen t in there. He'd have been off down the country, gon e clean out of there, and I'd never have met up with him.

  Sure, I was hungry, but it wasn't the first time an d I could have waited. They'd already shot their couga r and he wasn't going anyplace. I mean the meat woul d have been there, and that pretty waitress would hav e been there, too. Only difference would have been i n that man.

  I'd just left trouble behind, and I walked righ t through that door into twicet as much. It wasn't onl y that the man was there, it was what I said and wha t he saw.

  I went through the door and he set there with hi s back to me. There was nobody else in the room bu t that girl, who was just coming through the door wit h a coffeepot in her hand. Had I seen her first, it migh t have changed everything, too, because she was righ t pert and pretty, but what I saw was that man's back , a man in a black frock coat, and before I could thin k I said, "Pa?"

  He looked so much like pa that it just come out o f me, without me thinking, but it turned that man shar p around, and sure enough, he had a cast of featur e much like pa's only he was younger by ten years, an d there was something else about him. Pa had a touc h of gentleness in his face, where this man had none.

  His features were cold, handsome, clean-cut, but yo u needed only to look at him once to know there was n o mercy in him, none at all.

  "Pa?" he said. "I'm not your pa." And then hi s eyes dropped to my gun.

  The blanket-coat was off and slung over my arm , and he could see that gun with its pearl handle and it s red birds. I seen his face change. The expression, I mean.

  His scalp kind of drawed back, and when he looke d up at me it was like a wolf ready to jump a rabbit.

  "What made you think I was your pa?"

  I laughed, kind of embarrassed. "I didn't, really.

  Only when I come through the door, your back looke d like-I mean, he's got him a coat like that. I'm sorry, I j ust made a mistake."

  I started across the room toward another table, bu t he spoke and his tone was quiet. "No need to eat alone , boy. Sit here with me."

  If that wolf I mentioned could have talked, h e would have said something just like that, but what wa s I to do? If I could have thought faster, I might hav e excused myself. Instead I turned around, pulled bac k a chair, and sat down, and if there'd ever been a chanc e to avoid trouble, I missed it right then.

  The girl brought me a cup and a plate with gru b on it. There was meat, cougar meat from what the y said, and there was some rice and beans. It looke d good to me, and I set to, all the while wondering abou t that man at the table with me.

  "Travel far?" he asked.

  "Come down the mountain," I said. "Been ridin' h erd on some cows up yonder."

  "Looks like you quit at the right time." He sippe d his coffee. "This pa of yours . . . with the coat lik e mine? He herdin' cattle, too?"

  "Not right now. Ain't seen him in a while."

  He kind of prodded at me with questions, but I w asn't telling him anything. Least of all where I'd come from. By this time Judge Blazer may have ha d the word out to pick me up.

  As we sat there eating and sort of talking along, I b egan to get real bothered. This man had a gesture o r two just like pa and a way of lifting an eyebrow lik e him when he was skeptical of something. Many a tim e I'd known kinfolk to have the same mannerisms an d gestures--whether they inherited them or picked the m up from seeing them used, I don't know and it began to come over me that this man did not only loo k like pa but that he might even be related to him.

  What I wanted to know was who he was and wher e he hailed from, and in western country you never jus t up and asked a man his business or where he com e from. You just waited until he told you, if he was of a mind to. Yet I could try.

  "How's things back east?" I asked.

  "Times are hard," he said. He studied me coolly , and I felt the thin edge of fear, and it angered me. I t old myself I was foolish, that I was afraid of nothing.

  Besides, why should I fear him? Or anybody? Ye t something about him haunted me, and it may have bee n his resemblance to pa.

  "You and your father," he asked, "have you bee n here long?"

  "We move around," I replied. "A man takes wor k where he can find it."

  "Your pa now? He was from back east?"

  I chuckled. "Ain't ever'body? Nobody come fro m this country but Indians, and from what they tell m e they came from somewhere else, too."

  He threw me a hard glance. He didn't like me an y better than I liked him, and as we talked back an d forth he would come out with a question or, more often , just some leading comment. He was fishing for information, and I wasn't giving him any. Truth to tell, I k new mighty little about pa. I'd never guessed ho w little until he was gone, and with him the chance o f learning more.

  Now, maybe I'm only seventeen, but most of m y years been spent working around over the mountain s or desert and plains country, and I'd learned a thing o r two. This man carried a six-shooter, that was plain t o see, but he carried a sleeve gun, too, one of the m gambler's hideout guns, derringer type that fires tw o shots. Mighty good for close action across a card table.

  I noticed it because of the way he favored his righ t wrist when he put it down on the table and the way h e held his arm. Only a mite different, but to somebod y who knows it was plain enough.

  "Staying in town?" he asked, finally.

  "For a while. I been up in the hills so long I'm growin' grass in my ears. I want to just set and look a t the street for a while."

  He didn't like that, and I had an idea I don't really know why that he wanted me away from there.

  "Too bad," he said, casually, "I thought we migh t ride down the country together."

  "Ain't good weather for travelin'," I said. "It's to o durned cold to suit me."r />
  I was itching to get away from him, but I had an ide a he might just pick up and follow me. Yet I was curious , too, and wanted to know more about him. If he wa s some kin of pa's, I might learn something about p a from him, or about pa's family.

  Yet every instinct I had told me this man was dangerous, and more than that, he was evil. He had th e look about his eyes and mouth of a man who was short--t empered and cruel. And I trust my instincts.

  His manners were those of a gentleman, but fin e manners do not make a fine man, and I was alert fo r any clue as to what he planned, where he was from , or where he planned to go. He was no miner tha t much I could see nor was he a cowhand. A gambler?

  Well . . . maybe.

  The girl with the freckles was watching me, and sh e seemed bothered by something. After a bit I finished m y coffee and pushed back my chair.

  "I'm almighty tired," I said. "Good night."

  I arose abruptly and, without so much as a glanc e back, I left the room. I had moved quickly, hoping t o catch him kind of off balance, and that was just wha t I done. It hadn't seemed like I was fixing to move, bu t looked like I was going to set for a spell, which wa s how I'd wanted it to look. I wasted no time in the lobb y but went right upstairs to my room. Once inside, I shu t the door and put a chair under the knob so's it couldn't be opened.

  It was in my mind to open the window, get out, an d leave, taking out of there just as fast as I could travel , but it was a miserable night and I was bone-tired.

  The thought that come to me was almost as good.

  He didn't know what horse I'd been riding, becaus e he'd been in town for some time before I arrived an d had no reason to be curious about me until I walke d into that eating room and spoke to him.

  I'd been cold before and could be again, so I opene d my window wide and then got into bed.

  The wind blew through that window, icy cold, and I d one some shivering. Must have been an hour late r somebody tried the door, turning the knob real slo w and careful. The door didn't give because I had tha t chair under the knob, and after a minute or two th e knob was released and all was quiet. About that tim e he seemed to get the message of that cold wind comin' f rom under the door, because of a sudden I heard a kind of an exclamation and then quickly retreating footsteps. After a minute I heard the sound of a horse ridden rapidly down the street. Cheerfully, I closed th e window and got back into bed.

  There were two ways I could have gone if Pd lef t town by the trail, and he'd have to check them bot h out. Meanwhile I'd get some sleep.

  Lying there in bed, I studied about it. This man , whoever he was, had tried my door leastwise, I coul d think of nobody else who might try it. He had seeme d suspicious of me, and he resembled pa. Now, what di d all that amount to?

  Exactly nothing, except that man had apparentl y ridden out of town trying to overtake me, thinking I'd flown the coop.

  Why?

  Pa was dead, murdered by somebody. Somebod y who was either Judge Blazer or one of his friends, o r who was somebody else. If it was somebody else, h e hadn't murdered pa to rob him, because Blazer did that , or tried to.

  Suppose Blazer hadn't murdered pa, but just foun d him murdered and took advantage of the chance? Tha t sounded more like Blazer.

  Then that implied somebody else had done it, somebody who didn't even know pa had all that money, an d from his looks and the state of his clothes, figured h e hadn't anything worth taking.

  If that was the case, it had to be somebody who ha d known pa before, somebody from out of his past.

  "That's storybook stuff," I said aloud. "You got n o reason to think anything of the kind."

  Why would anybody from pa's past want him dead?

  Pa hadn't been east in years (if that was where he com e from), and so far as I knew, he'd had no letters fro m yonder.

  All of which left me nowhere but asleep. When I o pened my eyes with daybreak, the thought was still i n my mind but had gotten nowhere.

  After washing up a mite and brushing my clothes a s much as I could, I combed my hair slick and wen t down to the lobby. All was quiet and there was nobody around, so I stepped over to the desk and turne d that register around and looked at it.

  There was my name, and above it the only one wh o had checked in during the last three days was th e name Felix Yant. It was a name that meant nothin g to me, and I had an idea it was a name the man ha d assumed. Yet what was his purpose?

  The restaurant was empty, but there was a rustle o f sound from the kitchen and an occasional rattle o f dishes. I pulled back a chair, rather noisily, and sa t down. I wanted to eat and get out.

  The girl with the freckles looked in and then cam e quickly over. "You're early. Not much is ready, but w e can make you some flapjacks."

  "Fine. How about some eggs?"

  "I'll see." She hesitated. "Did you know that ma n who sat with you?"

  "Never saw him before." I looked up at her. "Do you know him?"

  "No, but he told my aunt he was looking for minin g properties. He rides out a good deal."

  "In this weather? Seems a bad time to look for a mine, when the ground's covered with snow and yo u can't even see how it lays or what the formations are."

  "We thought so, too."

  She brought coffee and, after a little while, a stac k of hotcakes and maple syrup. "We've got some eggs.

  My aunt says you can have them." She hesitated again.

  "She likes you."

  "Well, that's a help. Maybe I should stick around."

  "There isn't much work." She lingered. "This i s mostly mining around here, and some lumbering. Ove r the mountain and to the south there's cattle. Are you a cowboy?"

  "I'm whatever I need to be to get a job," I said, "bu t I've put by a little."

  She looked at me thoughtfully, for it was a rare ma n in those days who thought of tomorrow while punchin g cows. I didn't feel it necessary to explain that it wasn't my saving that had provided the money. Still, come t o think of it, it had been my capital. Thinking of tha t made me feel better, and for the first time it seeme d maybe I was entitled to that money.

  "I'm Teresa," she said. "Sometimes they call m e Terry."

  "My name's McRaven. Kearney McRaven. An d sometimes they call me just anything they can thin k of." I grinned at her. "I ain't seen such a pretty girl i n a long time."

  She flushed up a mite but she liked it, too. I wa s no hand at making talk with womenfolks, but pa, he'd always had a friendly way about him. "Say somethin g nice to them," he told me once, "and particularl y waitresses and such people. You've got to remembe r they put in a long, hard day, and many people grumbl e a lot. It does no harm to speak a friendly word."

  Well, I was willing. Fact is, I could have been mor e than friendly with that there Teresa if I knowed ho w to go about it.

  "He ever talk much?"

  She knew who I meant, all right. "No . . . scarcel y at all. But he watches. Nothing that happens aroun d him happens without his seeing it." And just at tha t minute he came in.

  "Good morning," he said cheerfully enough. "Yo u rise early."

  "On a cow ranch you're up before the sun," I said.

  "I was never no hand to lie abed, anyway."

  Felix Yant was what his name was? Should tha t mean anything to me? I hadn't heard the name before , so far as I could recall, and my recall was pretty good , yet the man worried me. I felt he knew more abou t me than he had any use for, and I didn't like it. Gav e me a feeling of being watched.

  He seemed friendly enough, and began to talk o f the mountains, the trees, then got to comparing thes e mountains with those back east. I listened mighty sharp , wanting to pick up a clue.

  He had hands like a gambler. They were slender an d white, beautiful hands, actually. I suspect he was wha t is called a gentleman, but I had a feeling if he was, i t was more by birth than by instinct. Yet he was an interesting talker, and once started he could hold a bod y spellbound.

  "This is all very
well," he said, waving a hand at th e surroundings, "but one needs to travel. You need perspective, some basis for comparison."

  Seemed to me he was talking as much for Teres a as for me, and there's nothing like a smooth-talkin g man to have a way with womenfolks. This here littl e one-horse town seemed mighty empty when he bega n talking of San Francisco, New York, London, Paris , and suchlike. Seemed to me he'd been everywhere an d seen everything and remembered most of it. Teres a was looking at him all starry-eyed, and that didn't se t well with me. I began to feel sore. I wished I had a story to match him, but when all you've done is pla y nursemaid to a few cows, it doesn't leave you much t o spend on conversation.

  "Me an' pa traveled some," I said defensively. "We covered most of the West, time to time. I been t o Dodge, and down there in El Paso . . . that's righ t acrosst the river from Mexico!"

  "So it is." Yant was amused and showed it. The n he slipped it in so casually I almost spoke up. He said , "Your father ever talk of taking you home? To hi s home, I mean?"

  That was one thing pa never mentioned, but I felt n o need to say so. "Time to time," I lied. But I wondere d why he had never mentioned it. Why had he not talke d of home? Told me of his family, the place where h e was born? The memories of his childhood?

  And then suddenly something did come back. I'd been very young then, a mere child, and there'd been a woman in the room. I remember she was slender an d dark-haired with large, lovely black eyes . . . or almos t black. I do not know where she came from, how sh e came to be there, or where "there" was, except tha t she was wearing a cloak and she had come in out o f the night.

  Did I remember anything? Or was it all my imagination? "I've only a few minutes. I'm afraid . . . deathl y afraid! He's coming back, Charles, and you know ho w he is! I'm afraid! If he ever finds out that I've eve n talked to you, he'd kill me. I mean it. Literally."

  "You mustn't be here. Leave . . . get away whil e you can. I only wish I-"

  "There's nothing you can do, Charles. There's nothing anybody can do! And if you come back, that woul d be the end of everything. They believe you did it , Charles. They all believe it . . . except grandfather. I d on't believe he does."

 

    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)