Conagher (1969) (15 page)

Read Conagher (1969) Online

Authors: Louis L'amour

BOOK: Conagher (1969)
3.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He glanced at the man who lay sprawle d in the doorway. He had never seen hi m before. He had never seen any of thes e men, but three of them rode Ladder Fiv e horses.

After making sure there were no mor e weapons, he threw their coats to them.

Then he gave a look around the cabin , keeping the men in his line of fire.

There was a sack of canned goods , several slabs of bacon, and a sack of flour.

He gathered them up and carried the m outside away from the door; then he wen t inside and kicked the coals from the fir e out into the room, and quickly steppe d out. In a moment the cabin had caugh t fire.

What in hell you tryin' to do ?
Th e one who yelled at Conagher was a blackjawe d man with a deep scar over one eye.

This here place has been a hide-out fo r thieves long enough. I'm burnin' it out .

What about our outfits ?

The hell with you! You were fre e enough to steal ST cows. Get your outfit s where you got your orders .

Smoke will kill you for this/' th e black-jawed man said , if I don't do i t first .

You open your mouth again until I tel l you to , Conagher said mildly , an d you'll have a scar over the other eye .

He pointed to another of the men .
Yo u saddle up for all of you, and be fast about it .

When the horses were saddled he tol d them to get on their horses and ride out.

The sheriff in the Plaza is just a-waitin'
f or you , he lied , so your best bet i s east .

East? There ain't a town or place fo r fifty miles !

Tough, ain't it? Well, that's the life of i an outlaw. You never know what's goin' t o happen next. As a matter of fact, there's a couple of sta ge stations, but I'd fight sh y of them, i f I were you. All of them kno w that brand you ride for .

He gathe
red up their guns as they rod e out and put t hem in a sack, then he put th e supplie s into another sack and loade d them on the dead man's horse.

Then he rode out, starting south , driving the cattle.

When the small herd came down th e slope back of the Teale cabin, Evie , followed by Ruthie and Laban, came ou t to watch. The cattle gathered at the wate r hole and at the trough, and he rode up t o the cabin. He swung down and took th e bag of supplies from the back of the horse.

Here's a couple of slabs of bacon, Mrs.

Teale, and you can split the canned good s with me, and the coffee. You divide it up.

I'll take one third to get me into th e Plaza .

This is very nice of you, Mr.

Conagher, but I am afraid we can't pay?

Didn't ask you to. These here supplie s were the wages of sin, ma'am, an' th e woebegone sinners who pursued th e path of Satan have seen the error of thei r ways. You take that grub and be glad .

He drew a six-shooter from the sack.

You keep this, too, you might have us e for it .

What happened, Mr. Conagher ?

Nothing to speak of. Those sinner s came upon evil times, but if they're wis e they are headed east now, and makin' goo d time .

He looked at her .
You got any of tha t soup left, Mrs. Teale? I'm a right hungr y man .

After he had eaten, watching the roa d through the windows, just in case, h e looked at Laban .
Boy, how'd you like t o make a couple of dollars and a free ride o n the stage ?

Laban glanced at Evie .
Well, sir, I'
d like it. But what would I have to do ?

Help me drive this herd to the Plaza.

I'll pay you two or three dollars and you r fare back on the stage .

Is it all right, ma? Can I go ?

Yes. Yes, you can. You'll take goo d care of him, Mr. Conagher ?

Likely he'll take care of me. That's a fine, strong boy, Mrs. Teale, and he'l l make a good hand .

When they reached the Plaza the y bunched the cattle at the stockyards an d put them in a pen.

At the livery stable the hostler looke d sharply at the Ladder Five brand on th e horse that Laban rode .
Now, see here?
h e began.

You see here
, Conagher said .
I'
m leavin' that horse for any Ladder Fiv e rustler to pick up. And you can tell the m that was the way I put it. The rider ain'
t likely to show up to claim it, and if he doe s you can go down to the saloon and tel l those loafers you've seen a real honest-toAbe-Lincol n ghost .

You penned some cattle .

Those are ST cows and I'm an ST
r ider, and in a few minutes I'm going t o sell those cattle, give the buyer a bill o f sale, and take a receipt. I'll be damned i f I'll drive them all the way back to th e ranch in this weather. Money is a whole lo t easier to carry .

Conagher and Laban went across to th e saloon, which like all such saloons was a club house, an exchange for trail information, an auction or sales room, o r whatever. At the door Conagher paused , glanced around, and saw Mahler sittin g across the room. He walked in, and said t o Laban , You keep shy of me until w e leave. A saloon is no place for a boy, bu t we've got business to do .

At the bar a squarely built man in a leather coat was watching them. Mahle r looked up, his face stiffening into har d lines as he recognized Conagher.

Conagher approached the man at th e bar .
Are you torn Webb ?

I am
.

I ride for the ST. I've got twentyseve n head of good stock down at the pen s I'd like to sell. I'll give you a bill of sal e and I'll want a receipt .

Webb hesitated .
I can use the cattle.

But isn't this an odd time to sell ?

This here
, Conagher spoke roughly , and not quietly , is recovered stolen stock.

It's too far a piece to drive it back to th e outfit .

Kris Mahler sat very still, starin g into his beer glass. His face was drawn an d cold. Conagher pointedly ignore d him.

What happened
?
somebody asked.

Conagher shrugged. His sheepskin coa t was unbuttoned and his gun hand wa s warm enough, warm as it would ever be.

He did not want a shooting, but he jus t didn't care. He had ridden too far in th e cold, he had been caused some roug h work, and weariness had eaten into ever y bone and sinew.

Trailed the cattle to a shack north o f Mrs. Teale's place. I recovered the cattle , burned the shack, and drove the stoc k here .

You trailed them? In this snow ?

Conagher looked at the speaker and sai d quietly , I trailed 'em. Happens I kne w about that shack, so when I lost the trail I knew they'd probably have to hole u p there .

Nobody spoke for a few minutes, an d then Webb said , I'll walk over and look a t the cattle .

Any idea who the men were ?
one ma n asked.

Well, they were ridin' Ladder Fiv e horses , Conagher said.

Kris Mahler shoved back his chair an d got up. For a moment he stood, hand s resting on the table, staring down. The n he turned abruptly and strode from th e room.

WITH the coming of spring th e wind blew cold and raw acros s the brown plains. Evie looke d at the stock with fear in her eyes, fo r both horses and cattle were painfull y thin. The past months had been hard.

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. H
e 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. H
e 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. H
e 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.

Other books

Hip Deep in Dragons by Christina Westcott
A Little Bit on the Side by John W O' Sullivan
The Shark God by Charles Montgomery
Summer Rental by Mary Kay Andrews
What You Wish For by Fern Michaels
Made to Love by Syd Parker
Cut and Run by Ridley Pearson
The Big Shuffle by Laura Pedersen
Wicked Forest by VC Andrews