Read Dead Man's Trail (9781101606957) Online
Authors: Frank Leslie
Chapter 29
Aiming the Yellowboy at Betajack's belly that bulged behind his long buffalo coat, Yakima slowly opened the door. Boots and voices thundered from the direction of the stairs. He closed the door quickly, wincing, and looked at Betajack. The old man gave him a foxy grin.
“You're gonna die tonight, you dog-eatin' son of a bitch.”
“Maybe, but I'm takin' you with me. Gut-shot.”
Yakima waited until the voices and the footsteps had died. Opening the door again, he poked his head out into the hall. In the corner of his eye, he saw Betajack lurch toward him. The old man froze when Yakima smiled at him and glanced at the end of the Yellowboy's barrel. Then he stepped aside, drew the door wide, and waved the barrel at the opening.
Betajack stepped through. Yakima followed him out, drew the door closed behind him, and shoved the Yellowboy against the old man's back, prodding him over to the outside door. He could hear a few men still celebrating downstairs though the mandolin player was now drunkenly raking out a mournful tune. A girl was saying, “Stop,” over and over again in a tired, pleading tone.
As Yakima stepped in front of Betajack to open the outside door, a man's voice rose from downstairs: “For chrissakes, can't you see she's had enough? Put that goddamn knife away, you crazy son of a bitch!”
Boom! Boom!
The explosions reverberated through the floor under Yakima's moccasins. All was quiet for about two seconds, and then a girl screamed. There was the heavy thud of a bodyâthat of the big barman, most likelyâhitting the floor.
Again, the girl screamed sharply. A man laughed.
Betajack looked at Yakima and a smile stretched his lips with that dark, leering grin. Yakima hardened his jaw, pressed the Winchester's barrel against the underside of the man's chin, and pushed him out onto the landing. Betajack snarled and grunted painfully, tipping his head away from the rifle. Yakima gave him another savage prod, tearing the skin beneath his chin, until the old killer was stumbling, half falling down the stairs, holding on to the railing and causing it to wobble wildly. Yakima was sure it would fall off, but by now the killers inside were all too drunk or happy to pay much attention. He didn't much care if Betajack fell over the side and broke his neck.
He'd had enough of the man and his curly wolves.
Once to the bottom of the stairs, Betajack looked harried. He was breathing hard, his face swollen and red. Yakima could see that even in the darkness.
Yakima poked the gun into his back to get him stumbling off down the alley behind the jailhouse. When he finally had the old man on the east end of town, he stopped suddenly. A horse stood before him, off in the shadows of a dark frame house, about thirty yards ahead. He could see starlight reflected in the horse's eyes, the vapor of its breath jetting around its head. Something lay on the horse's back. Then he remembered Sonny.
Yakima placed his hand on the back of Betajack's neck, forcing him to his knees.
“Stay there.”
Then he walked slowly toward the horse, holding his hands out placatingly. The horse snorted and nickered and started to turn away just as Yakima grabbed its reins. He led the horse over to where Betajack knelt, kicked Sonny's boots out of the stirrup, and pulled the kid out of the saddle.
Sonny hit the ground and lay still, head turned to one side. Blood oozed from the deep gash in his forehead that had turned pasty blue in death.
Betajack looked at Yakima. “You're a real tough son of a bitch, aren't you?”
“I do all right. Climb up there.”
“We'll see how tough you are when my men come lookin' for me.”
Yakima grabbed him by the back of his neck again and thrust him against Sonny's pinto. Cursing, Betajack grabbed the horn and swung heavily into the leather. Yakima led the horse slowly back and in a roundabout way to where Wolf waited across the main street from the saloon. Ten minutes later he and the outlaw leader were a quarter mile east of town, Yakima leading Betajack's horse by its bridle reins.
Betajack laughed as he clung to the horn with both hands. “You're crazy. I don't know what the hell you think you're doin', but if you think this is gonna keep my boys and Hendricks from comin' after me, you're dumber than you look.”
Yakima didn't say anything.
“I asked you what you think you're doin',” Betajack repeated, louder.
“Shut up,” Yakima said as he continued trotting Wolf along the trail that shone like blue-tinged quicksilver in the light of a rising quarter moon.
“I'm your hostageâthat it? Ha! You see, I just don't care if I die, as long as the gutless son of a yellow-livered bitch dies with me!”
It was easy for Yakima to see where the stage had swung off the trail's right side and into the mouth of a narrow canyon. He followed the tracks through the canyon, knowing that it would be easy for Betajack's men to follow, too. A quarter mile up the canyon, it doglegged to the east. The low, left sandstone wall disappeared, and lights appeared in a clearing.
Yakima drew rein, staring straight ahead into the clearing backed by boulder-strewn escarpments. The lights came from the windows of what appeared a long, low shack sitting to the right of a darker, smaller shack. Yakima drew a breath to call out to the lit cabin, but a slug blasted into a rock just ahead and to his left. The rifle wail echoed loudly off the canyon's rock walls.
“Who the hell's out there, goddamn it?” came Charlie Adlard's shout. “One more step and I'll send you to Glory!”
“Stop shootin', goddamn itâit's Henry!”
“Henry who?”
“The Henry who's gonna run that rifle up your ass if you shoot it again!”
“Who you got with you?”
“Betajack.”
Yakima rode forward as a bulky, bandy-legged shadow moved out from behind a rock sheathed in cedars and junipers about fifty yards ahead and to the right. Adlard cradled his Winchester in his arms, and as Yakima jerked the outlaw leader's horse along behind him, Adlard poked his hat brim off his forehead and said, “I must be gettin' hard o' hearin'. I thought you said that was Betajack.”
“I did.”
Adlard just stopped and stared, hang-jawed, as Yakima and old Betajack rode past him and on across the clearing and past a corral to the right, to the long building with the lit windows. As he approached the place, Yakima saw that it was a mud-brick bunkhouse with a brush-roofed veranda. Another man stood atop the veranda in front of the door framed by wanly lit windows, holding a rifle in one hand, smoking a cigarette with the other.
Yakima recognized the spindly frame in the wool coat, watch cap, and scarf wound around the man's neck. “Weatherford, it's Yakima.”
“Figured.” Elijah Weatherford walked up to the edge of the porch, blowing out a thick smoke plume and turning his head slightly to stare sidelong toward Yakima and his prisoner. “Who you got with you?”
“Betajack.”
Weatherford gave a raspy chuckle. “Say again?”
Yakima swung down from Wolf's back and stepped back as he aimed the rifle at the bulky outlaw. “Sit and light a spell.”
When Betajack had climbed out of the saddle, breathing hard, his wrinkled face showing red in the light from the windows, Weatherford stepped back in shock. Yakima prodded Betajack up the porch steps. Weatherford backed up as though from a rabid bobcat but then lurched forward toward Yakima as the half-breed followed the outlaw onto the porch. “Good Lord, boy, what have you done?”
“I hope bought us a little time.”
Stopping in front of the door, Betajack turned a dark look at Yakima, who said, “Well, you been wantin' to see the prosecutor.”
Betajack flared his nostrils again in exasperation, then tripped the steel-and-leather latch and thrust the Z-frame, half-logged door open. Its hinge screeched. Yakima shoved Betajack over the threshold, followed him in, and then closed the door behind them.
Yakima looked around. There was a lamp on the wooden table to his left. To his right was a potbellied stove. Glendolene and Mendenhour sat on a steamer trunk angled before it. The Rands sat on a couple of blankets on the floor nearer Yakima and Betajack while Lori O'Reilly sat in a chair beside it, facing the door, her arm still in its sling. They all looked cold and frightened and generally miserable. Now as they all turned to see Betajack, befuddlement wrinkled their foreheads.
“Oh!” said Mrs. O'Reilly, staring at the outlaw leader as though at someone she knew she should know but couldn't quite place.
Mendenhour rose slowly, tensely from his perch on the steamer trunk, lower jaw hanging, eyes sparking brightly as he pointed a gloved hand at Betajack. “You!”
“Yeah, it's me,” the old outlaw said with brassy defiance, nodding his head. “How you doin', Mr. Lawyer? You still pissin' down your leg, are ya, you yellow-livered son of a bitch?”
Mendenhour jerked his gaze at Yakima. “Henry, what in the hell is the meaning of this?”
“Who is he?” asked Sally Rand, fear showing in her wide light brown eyes as she stared at the outlaw, pressing her fingers to her chin.
Lori O'Reilly said in a thin, disbelieving voice, “The man who's been . . . killing us. . . .”
Mendenhour walked stiffly toward Betajack. Behind him, Glendolene rose from the steamer trunk, as well, as befuddled by the outlaw's presence as everyone else in the room.
“Figured ole Betajack here might be a ticket for our free passage the rest of the way to Belle Fourche.” Yakima shoved the man toward the far wall cast in shadow. “Go sit down over there. I'm gonna find some rope, tie you up.”
Betajack held his ground, however, because Mendenhour stopped in front of him, glaring at his enemy. “You're a cold-blooded killer,” he said.
“And you're yellow, Mendenhour. Oh, you can hang a man, sureâespecially an
innocent
manâif you got the law behind you. But what about if the law ain't behind you no more?” Betajack laughed raucously and poked a gnarled finger against Mendenhour's chest. “Then you piss down your leg like a hind-tit calf!”
Mendenhour's face swelled and turned nearly as red as Betajack's. “I will not stand here and be insulted by a cold-blooded killer and common stock thief. You're the next Betajack I'll hang, Floyd. As soon asâ”
“As soon as what?” Betajack barked, shoving his face right up against Mendenhour's. “As soon as you swear in a couple more law dogs to back your play, or”âhe glanced over the prosecutor's shoulder at his wife standing on the other side of the room, looking strickenâ“a hefty pair of
balls?
”
Mendenhour clenched his fists at his sides, glaring down at Betajack, who stood about two inches shorter. “I could kill you for that.”
“Why don't you try? Hell, you got the breed here to back you.” Betajack grinned up at the man in open challenge.
“All right, all right,” Yakima said, grabbing Betajack's coat collar. “I didn't bring him here toâ”
Just then Mendenhour gave an enraged snarl, jerked his hands up, and wrapped them around the old man's wrinkled, corded neck, driving the outlaw back against the closed door. Betajack laughed, showing his teeth as he jerked both arms up to easily break the prosecutor's hold. Then he wrapped his own hands around Mendenhour's neck and drove him backward, the Rands scrambling to get out of their way.
Yakima remained where he was. Somehow it seemed fitting that the two antagonists should get a shot at each other
mano a mano,
without Betajack having his gang behind him, without Mendenhour having Yakima and the other stage passengers to cower behind. He knew he should intervene. A better man would. But he felt a savage satisfaction in watching the two men going at it with their fists, snarling and mewling like a bear and a bobcat chained to the same rock sled.
Suddenly, the two men were on the floor, punching and wrestling, boots clomping on the rotten floorboards, cursing and spitting and trying to gouge each other's eyes with their fingers. Yakima looked around. The Rands and even Mrs. O'Reilly seemed to be sharing his satisfaction. Only Glendolene was not. She stared at him reprovingly. Finally, she walked over, glared up at him, and said, “You've made your point.”
“What's that?”
“That my husband is no better than that old killer.”
Yakima looked at the fighting pair. Mendenhour had the prosecutor on his back and was shoving his elbow against the old man's neck while trying to hold the man's other hand flat against the floor. Betajack had a hand clamped over Mendenhour's nose, trying to dig his fingers into the younger man's eyes. Both continued to kick and wheeze and curse under their rasping breaths.
Yakima glanced at Glendolene again, his ears warming with chagrin. He walked over, grabbed Mendenhour's left arm, and pulled him off the man. “That's enough.”
“Let me go, goddamn it!” The prosecutor jerked his arm from Yakima's grip but merely rocked back on his heels, breathing hard. He'd had enough. As had Betajack, who lay supine on the floor, limbs slack, his breath rattling in and out of his throat as he stared up at the ceiling.
Mendenhour swept a thick wing of red-brown hair from his eyes and looked at Yakima. “What're we going to do with him?”
“We'll take him with us when we pull out of here tomorrow,” the half-breed said, walking over and removing a coil of rope from a nail in a ceiling post. “He should get us through to Belle Fourche without further trouble.”
“Won't happen!” Betajack said, wagging his head. He looked up at Glendolene and the other passengers. “You're all gonna die. You're all gonna die slow for givin' refuge to this cowardly killer!” He jerked his knobby chin and fiery eyes at Mendenhour, who merely glared back at him.
Sally Rand turned her face against her husband's chest.
Lori O'Reilly laughed, drawing all eyes to her.