Fire on the Mountain (19 page)

Read Fire on the Mountain Online

Authors: Edward Abbey

BOOK: Fire on the Mountain
8.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You’d make a good partner, Billy. I’m sorry you have to go.”

I said nothing. I felt too resigned and at the same time too bitter to make an argument.

As we stood there in the gloom of the kitchen we heard the rumble of engines, not one but several and
approaching rapidly. We went to the front door and looked out. Over the rim of the bluff behind the ranch rose billows of dust,

“Here they come at last,” Grandfather said, though as yet we could see nothing but the dust cloud. The first thing he did was put his glasses on. The second thing he did was pick up the shotgun.

“Maybe it’s Lee,” I said, but the old man shook his head.

The lead government car approached around the turn, came down the winding road and toward the house past the outbuildings and under the trees. The first car was followed by two others, gray government sedans loaded with armed men.

The first car stopped out in the yard, half in the shade. While the driver stayed at the wheel the man beside him got out. It was Burr, the U.S. Marshal. He wore a suit, like DeSalius, like a businessman, and was not armed. But we could see the glint of rifles in the other two cars and the sheen of leather straps and badges. Two men in the first car, counting the marshal, and three in each of the others.

The marshal walked toward us. He was not smiling at all this time.

“Billy,” Grandfather whispered to me, “you sneak out to the pickup and get the revolver.”

“Yes sir.”

I sidled off to the end of the porch while Grandfather, holding his shotgun, waited for the marshal to speak. There was no way for me to get to the pickup truck unobserved; the men in the cars were watching me. So I simply walked as casually as I could toward the truck, hoping no one would pay me any attention. As I went I heard the opening parley between the old man and the marshal.

“Good morning, Mr. Vogelin.”

“Stop right there. Stop. Don’t come any closer.”

“I said good morning, Mr. Vogelin.”

“I heard you, Marshal. Now you stop right where you are and don’t come one step closer.”

“Okay, I’m stopped.”

“Stay there.”

I looked back. The marshal stood some thirty feet away from the porch steps, full in the harsh glare of the sun and facing the double-barreled shotgun aimed at him from the shadow on the porch.

“Now Mr. Vogelin, I guess you know why I’m here.”

“It won’t do you any good, Marshal.”

“I’m here to help you move, Mr. Vogelin. I’m here to carry out the orders of the Court. Are you ready to leave?”

“I’m not leaving.”

“All right, Mr. Vogelin. But I thought I’d give you one last chance to leave peacefully. I’ll use force if I have to.”

“You’ll have to. I’m ready. I’m ready, Marshal. Tell your men to start shooting.”

“We don’t want anything like that. For godsake listen to reason.”

“I’ve got all the reason I need, Marshal.”

I reached the truck, opened the door and half entered, leaning toward the dashboard compartment. But when I opened it I found the revolver gone. I knew I hadn’t taken it. Maybe Grandfather—

“Watcha doing, sonny?” One of the marshal’s deputies stood behind me, hand on the butt of his pistol. His belt was studded with brass shells.

I decided to make a dash for the house. But before I could get clear of the truck the man grabbed me, twisted my arm behind my back and forced me away from the truck toward the three cars.

“We better keep you out of the way, sonny,” the deputy said. “We don’t want any children to get hurt.”

“You’re hurting my arm,” I howled.

“I’m sorry.” The man eased up a bit on the pressure. As he did so I made another attempt to break free. He
tightened his grip again. “Say, don’t try that, kid. Take it easy or I’ll have to put the cuffs on you.”

He pushed me into the back seat of the second car and got in beside me, breathing hard and stinking of sweat. His harness creaked. He looked like a draft horse. The two men in front, also armed and in uniform, ignored us. They were watching and listening to the scene by the verandah, where my grandfather and the marshal were still talking. We had no trouble at all in hearing everything that was said.

“No,” the old man was saying, “if you want to get me out of here you’ll have to dig me out.”

“We’ll do that, Mr. Vogelin, if we have to. If you want it that way that’s what we’ll do. But I ask you, for the last time, don’t give us any trouble. Somebody might get bad hurt. Maybe you. Maybe one of us. Maybe me. Somebody might even get killed, Mr. Vogelin. I ask you to think about that. Is it worth it?”

Grandfather answered from the shadows of the porch. In the deep shade we could see little of him, only the dull shine of the shotgun and the twinkle of his glasses.

“You take yourself and your pistol whackers off my property and nobody’ll get hurt.”

“Can’t do that, Mr. Vogelin. These here orders—”

“I don’t care what your orders are. I’ll kill the first man who sets a foot on this porch or touches a hand to my house.”

“Now wait a minute, Mr. Vogelin. Let’s talk about this some more.”

“There’s nothing to talk about. Nothing at all. Either you and your men go away or we shoot it out, that’s all. I’m an old man now, I’d as soon die today as any other. It’s a nice day. Watch out there, don’t try to creep any closer!”

The marshal made a futile gesture with his hands, staring at the specter on the porch. He pushed back his hat and scratched his head. He looked around at me and the seven deputies sitting in the cars. He looked over at the barn and up at the windmill, which was
still. He looked up, briefly, at the sun. Ten o’clock. He pulled a watch from his suit and looked at it.

“Well, Mr. Vogelin. …” A short plump official with a baggy seat to his trousers, the marshal looked harmless as a mailman. “Well, Mr. Vogelin, I don’t know what else I can say. My orders are to get you out of here.”

Grandfather made no reply. He waited.

The men in the car with me stared intently toward the house. I reached cautiously for the door handle at my side, found it, pushed down. The latch clicked open. I pushed the door open and rolled out while the deputy reached after me with clawing fingers.

“Grandfather!” I screamed. “Wait for me!”

The deputy caught me by my belt and yanked me back into the car. I fought with him, kicking and punching, until he again grabbed my wrist and bent my arm behind my back.

He held a pair of handcuffs before my eyes. “See these, boy? You see these things? If you don’t sit still like a good boy I’m going to put these on you and you won’t like that one little bit, no sir.”

I relaxed and tried hard not to cry. What hurt me most was not the twisted arm but the realization, the gradual realization that Grandfather had tricked me into leaving the house, that he had sent me after the revolver knowing it was not in the truck and also knowing that I would be captured. I felt betrayed. My nose was running and my eyes threatening to leak. I sniffed.

“Don’t cry, sonny,” the deputy said, relaxing his grip on my wrist. “You’re all right.”

“You shut up!” I bawled. “Get your dirty paw off me.”

“You’re a wild one, ain’t you?”

“Here comes Burr,” one of the deputies in the front seat said. “Looks like we’ll have some fun.”

I sat still and looked with the others. The marshal was walking slowly toward us, head bowed and hands
in his pockets. The door of the ranch-house slammed shut behind him.

He stopped close to the cars. “Everybody out. Bring your grenades. Stick them on your rifles. Spread out. Take cover. Take the boy out of the firing line.”

He stood quietly, not watching, as the men scrambled out of the cars and followed his orders. The man who had captured me pulled me out of the car and led me toward the bunkhouse. Holding my arm in his and gripping my wrist with his huge hand, we stood against the shaded wall and watched the others.

The marshal’s men, crouching behind the trees and the outbuildings, were attaching the tear gas grenades to their rifles. I looked toward the house. The verandah was empty now, the door bolted, the last window closed and shuttered; the place looked solid as a fort. I knew that Grandfather was watching through the little gunport he had drilled through the wall halfway between the kitchen window and the front door—watching everything across the sights of his gun.

The marshal, standing in an exposed position near his automobile, studied the situation. With all the doors of the house barred and all the windows shuttered, locked from the inside, his primary problem was how to get the tear gas inside the building.

I watched him speaking to his assistant, saw the assistant speak to one of the deputies, saw the deputy, with several tear gas grenades in his hands, start off in a wide circle around the house toward the bluff in the rear.

But that wouldn’t do them any good. In the first place Grandfather would see through the maneuver. In the second place they’d still have to get a man close in to the house to pry open a shutter or climb to the roof. That meant risking somebody’s life.

But then I realized that the old man, alone inside, could not possibly cover all the ground surrounding the house. He could not be in two places at the same time. All that the marshal had to do to insure success
was send his men up to the house from opposite sides. Even then, however, Grandfather would be able to kill some of them. The marshal was understandably reluctant to risk anyone’s life in this operation and he kept us all waiting for a long time, perhaps twenty minutes or more, before he did anything at all other than send the one deputy to the high ground in the rear of the house.

At last he was ready. The marshal stepped out into the scalding sunlight and took a few slow paces toward the house.

“All right, Vogelin,” he said loudly, “we’re not waiting any more. You ready to come out?”

We all stared toward the house. There was no reply. The marshal turned to one of the deputies near the parked cars. “Give me the ax.”

The deputy found an ax in one of the cars and carried it out to the marshal, then returned to his place behind the trunk of a cottonwood.

Holding the ax in his hands, the marshal faced the house. “You see this here ax, Mr. Vogelin? Now I’m coming up there and I’m gonna chop down your front door.” He paused. “You hear me, Mr. Vogelin?”

We waited for the answer. There was no answer.

I thought of the old man crouching inside the darkened house, moving from peephole to peephole, front and rear, trying to see everything that was happening. His fort was also a trap. He needed help. He needed me. He needed Lee Mackie.

The marshal took a step toward the house, brandishing the ax. “Here I come Mr. Vogelin,” he shouted, loud and clear. “Can you see me? I’m coming to chop down your front door and help you out of there.” As he shouted, the marshal took two more deliberate steps toward the house.

Now the man in the rear of the house advanced a little, moving from rock to rock, keeping low and under cover. If he was able to reach the house he might climb
to the roof and simply drop the tear gas bombs down the chimneys.

“Grandfather,” I yelled, “watch out for the man in”

The deputy’s fat hand clapped across my mouth. He screwed my arm behind my back. “You shut up, boy,” he said firmly.

“Here I come, Mr. Vogelin,” the marshal shouted, taking another step toward the house. “Here I come, look at me.”

Something whistled through the air above the marshal’s head as we heard the crack of a rifle from the inside of the house.

With amazing alacrity the marshal jumped back and ran for the shelter of the nearest car. At the same time the man in the rear of the house ran forward, reaching the comparative safety of the walls, and began edging his way around a corner toward the nearest of the porch pillars. Climbing that he could attain the roof. But again he might expose himself. So hugging the wall, the deputy waited for the marshal to do something, to give him another chance.

Mr. Burr was slow to act. He was in no hurry to draw the old man’s fire again. But something had to be done. The sun was creeping higher, the day was becoming impossibly hot and cruel and exasperating.

We waited, we waited, while the marshal, squatting behind his automobile, consulted with his assistant and one of the deputies. Another five, ten, fifteen minutes passed in this way, with nothing of any apparent importance happening. I knew the time involved because I could read the watch on the hairy wrist of the deputy whose hand was hovering near my mouth.

Where, I wondered, where in God’s name was Lee? Now when we needed him more than ever before, he was not here.

At last the marshal prepared to act again. Remaining in the shelter of the car, I heard him call to his men:

“Smoke him out, boys.”

Almost simultaneously five rifles went off and five heavy grenades lobbed through the air and crashed against the front of the house, around the doors and windows of the porch. They exploded on contact, releasing billows of yellow gas that gathered under the porch roof, lazily oozing over the edges. Some of the tear gas no doubt seeped into the house through the cracks in the barricaded openings.

I’d almost forgotten the man in the rear. When I looked for him I found him already on the roof of the house crawling toward the nearest of the two chimneys, the one for the living room fireplace. I imagined the bombs bursting in the fireplace and in the kitchen stove, filling the house with their intolerable fumes.

“Grandfather!” I howled, once, before the heavy hand jammed my mouth.

“I’m gonna gag you, sonny,” the deputy said, “if you make one more squeak.”

There was nothing I could do. In helpless outrage I saw the man on the roof kneel beside the fireplace chimney, cock a grenade and drop it down inside. Dust, gas and smoke flashed up out of the stack as the man moved to the other chimney.

Now the marshal stood up behind his car, scanning the house with anxious eyes, waiting for the front door to fly open and the old man to come stumbling out with his hands on his eyes. But he didn’t—not my grandfather.

The deputy on the roof dropped in the rest of his tear gas shells, four in all, and sat down to wait. His position on the roof, though exposed to the sun, was perfectly safe.

Other books

A Highland Christmas by M.C. Beaton
Rose by Martin Cruz Smith
Red Snow by Christine Sutton
Logan's Run by William F. Nolan, George Clayton Johnson
Margherita's Notebook by Elisabetta Flumeri, Gabriella Giacometti
The Shadow Men by Christopher Golden; Tim Lebbon
The Oracle Rebounds by Allison van Diepen
The Cruellest Month by Louise Penny