the High Graders (1965) (15 page)

Read the High Graders (1965) Online

Authors: Louis L'amour

BOOK: the High Graders (1965)
8.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

It lay several miles off the travel route s in a huddle of low ridges and hills, a patc h of heaped-up, sun-burned boulders, browned by tim e and the wind and sun. Around them lay an acre or s o that was flat sand grown up with a little mesquite, a little cholla, and some cat-claw. On th e ridges juniper grew.

In among the rocks, and not easily found, was a cold spring of very good water. Wind blew through th e rocks and over the spring, so the air right at th e water was always cool, and often cold.

In under the boulders were several low caves where a man might bed down, and each of them had more tha n one approach. On low ground nearby, in the ope n but actually difficult to see, were places where a man might leave a couple of horses.

Most of the Rafter range that lay in thi s direction had been abandoned since the mines starte d up and old Jack was killed, and few riders woul d be rustling around near Boulder Spring.

Though Lon Court might have holed up a t any of the other spots, Mike Shevlin wa s gambling that Boulder Spring was the place.

Next he reviewed the little he knew of Lo n Court. The man was not a gunfighter--he was a killer. He hunted men the way old Winkle r hunted wolves; he stalked them, and killed the m when he could do so safely. That did not imply th e man was a physical coward, and Shevlin was sur e he was not. To Lon Court killing was a business , and he took no chances on being wounded or being see n by his victims or by anyone else. The ver y nature of his calling depended on being unknown.

To secure his own safety, Mike Shevli n knew he must find Lon Court before the kille r found him, but there was little time, for he must also find th e gold.

He was sure that Gib Gentry had bee n deliberately set up in the freighting busines s so the gold could be shipped with maximum securit y and a minimum of talk, and now that Gentry was out of th e picture, who would take over? Who would handle th e shipment? And might they not direct every effort towar d getting the gold out of the country while they could?

He had tried to stir things up so that Ben Stow e would be forced to make a move, yet now Stow e might settle right back and wait, for he was a canny man, and not one to be hurried.

Suddenly, the horse's ears came u p sharply. Shevlin slowed his pace a little, searchin g the country.

He stopped none too soon, for even as his ow n mount became motionless, a rider emerged from a draw about two hundred yards off. He was a tall man riding a long-legged grulla, a tough, mouse-colored mountain horse. The ma n wore a narrow-brimmed hat and a nondescrip t gray coat. And he was following a trail.

Shevlin's position was excellent. His hors e had come to a dead stop, half sheltered by boulders , stunted juniper, and low brush. H
e spoke softly to his horse, and sat his saddle , waiting.

The man held a rifle in his right hand, and h e rode slowly, checking the trail from time to time.

He was surely following someone, following with grea t care, and it was Shevlin's guess that the man'
s quarry was not far ahead of him. And at the sam e instant Mike Shevlin realized with startlin g clarity that this was Lon Court.

He was as positive of it as if the man ha d been identified by a pointing finger. Everything abou t him filled the picture Shevlin had made fro m bits he recalled hearing; coupled with this was th e man's presence here, and his manner.

Mike Shevlin slid his rifle from it s scabbard and let the rider take a little more lead.

Then he started his own horse down the trai l after him.

Chapter
12

He left the trail to his horse, hardl y daring to shift his attention from the man ahead of hi m for a moment. He would get only one chance i f Lon Court saw him, for the man would shoot---
i nstantly, and with accuracy.

Who was the man following? Obviously it wa s someone only a short distance ahead, or he would b e riding with greater speed. He was keeping his eye s on the trail left by the rider, and he too wa s taking no chances.

The man's horse, the nondescript clothin g -comnei of them stood out. He merged into th e background of desert and boulders, so that at a greater distance than he was from Shevlin he would hav e been scarcely visible.

The day was warm. Sweat trickled down Mik e Shevlin's neck, beaded on his forehead. H
e shifted his hands on the Winchester and dried hi s palms on his shirt front. By now Court wa s slanting up the hill, as if about to top out on th e crest.

Court dismounted and, rifle in hand, moved to th e top of the ridge. He was casing his rifle to hi s shoulder when suddenly he seemed to freeze, hi s attention riveted on something beyond the ridge.

Mike Shevlin's horse was in sand now , walking carefully and making no sound, and Shevli n was closing the distance between them, drawing steadil y nearer the sniper on the ridge.

When still perhaps sixty yards off, Shevlin dre w up and dismounted, trailing his reins. H
e desperately wanted to know what lay beyond tha t ridge, to see who it was that Court was stalking, bu t there was no possibility of that.

Lon Court was as dangerous as a cornere d rattler, and never so dangerous as he would be now , if caught in the act. Only his concentration on hi s job had permitted Shevlin to come so close as this.

The warm air was still. The only sound was a cicada singing in the brush near the road.

Shevlin, careful not to start a stone rolling to war n Court, worked his way silently along the slope.

Then he paused and, choosing two small pebble s from the gravel near his feet, he flipped one a t Court's horse. The grulla jumped an d snorted.

Lon Court whipped around as quick as a cat , looking toward the horse.

"Over here, Lon!"

Lon Court wheeled and fired in the sam e instant, but he fired too soon. His bullet wa s a little high, but Mike Shevlin's was more carefull y aimed. Pointed for the middle of Court's chest, i t struck the hammer on the rifle and deflecte d upward, ripping Court's throat and jaw.

Desperately, Court tried to work his rifle , then he dropped it and grabbed for his six-shooter.

He was on his feet, standing with them slightly apart , the old narrow-brimmed hat pulled down over hi s eyes. His yellow mustache showed plainly.

Shevlin stepped off to his right and fired again, th e bullet turning Court, whose shot went wild.

Court brought his gun back on target just a s Shevlin fired his third shot, putting it right throug h Court's skull.

Mike walked up to the dead man and looke d down at him. He felt no regret or pity.

Lon Court had chosen his path with his eyes open , and must have known that someday it would end just as it had. I n his time he had killed a lot of men, and now h e lay dead himself, killed by one of those he had bee n sent to get.

Returning to his horse, Shevlin mounted u p and went over the ridge. In the valley beyond there wa s a dim trail, an old trail. On it h e found the tracks of a horse, and followed them.

When he had gone only a few feet he sa w where the horse had dug in hard and taken off on a hard run. The rider must have been at tha t point when he heard the shots.

Shevlin was almost on the edge of town, stil l following the tracks, before he caught sight of th e rider. It was Laine Tennison.

She pulled off to the side of the trail an d waited when she saw him coming.

"Scare you?" he asked.

"Was that you back there?"

"Uh-huh. I was one of them."

She looked at him searchingly. "Wha t happened?"

"There was a man named Lon Court. Bee n around for years. He hires out to big cattl e outfits or anybody who has killing they wan t done. He was laying for you."

"And you stopped him?"

"Don't make a lot of it. I was on hi s list, too."

"You ... you killed him?"

"Ma'am," Shevlin said dryly, "you neve r get far talking things over with a man holding a gun. And this here man wasn't much give n to talk."

"What's going to happen now?"

"As a result of that? Well, when a man lik e Lon Court dies nobody cares much. Not in thi s country, in these times.

"As to what will happen, I wouldn't know.

We're going to ride into Rafter, you and me, and thi s time you're going to stay there with the Claggs, and don'
t leave there or I'll quit the whole thing. I c an't be running around looking after you, with everythin g else I've got to do."

The streets were strangely empty when the y came into town. After leaving Laine at th e Claggs', Mike Shevlin rode to the sheriff'
s office.

Wilson Hoyt looked up sourly, and with n o welcome. "All right, what's your argument?"

"I just came in to report a shooting. Lo n Court is dead."

Hoyt knew the name. He turned the ide a over in his mind, growing angrier by the minute.

"Who the hell brought him in here?" he said.

"Somebody who wanted Laine Tenniso n killed. Somebody who wanted me killed, and wh o killed Gib Gentry by mistake."

"You think Court killed Gentry?"

"The only man who was supposed to be riding tha t trail that night was me," Shevlin said.

"Only Gentry was coming to see me--to warn me, i n fact."

Wilson Hoyt considered this. He put i t together with a few other facts. Gib Gentry ha d been drinking the night before he was killed, but that wa s not unusual, for Gib had been hitting th e bottle a lot these last few months.

Hoyt had, in his slow, methodical, ye t thorough way traced Gentry's movements.

Nobody had anything to conceal and they truste d Hoyt, as they had, for the most part, like d Gentry. Gentry had been a rough-and-ready bu t free-handed man who made no enemies. The las t man who had spoken to Gentry was Brazos, whe n Gib got his horse, and Gib had definitel y been riding after Shevlin.

What disturbed Hoyt was the knowledge that just befor e Gentry went to the stable for his horse he had a brief talk with Red, and then Red had ridden of f out of town. Shortly after, Gentry had gone for hi s horse.

"Lon Court hadn't been in town," Hoy t said. "I didn't even know he'd been in th e country. If I had, I'd have run him the hel l out of it."

"Lon Court never rode a mile without bein g paid for it," Shevlin said. "Who do you think stand s to gain by having me killed? By having Lain e Tennison killed?"

"Where does she fit into th?"

"Somebody thinks she might be an owner.

Clagg Merriam learned the other night that sh e had wealthy connections in Frisco. The Su n Strike is owned in Frisco."

"They wouldn't murder a woman."

"You forget mighty quick. What about Ev e Bancroft?"

"That was a mistake."

Wilson Hoyt looked up at Shevli n sharply. "Clagg Merriam? What the hel l has he got to do with this?"

"He's the man behind Ben Stowe."

Hoyt's little world of certainties was toppling.

"Like hell!" he exclaimed. "Mr. Merria m scarcely knows Ben--and he's a respecte d man."

Mike Shevlin did not feel like arguing with him.

He would leave it to Hoyt's solid commo n sense. He was tired, but there was much to be done.

He leaned over the desk. "Hoyt,"
h e said, "your nice playhouse is ruined for good , and you might as well look at it straight.

Maybe you can pull this town out of the hole it's i n ... maybe you can't. I figure most of thes e folks--even those who've been shutting their eye s to what goes on--are good folks, given a chance.

"But Eve Bancroft is dead, and that'
s getting to them. They won't stand still for it, the wa y I see it. All you'd have to do would be to get up an d make a stand, and you'd have them behind you. If yo u don't, your rep as a town pacifier i s finished, because there'll be more killings."

"You said Court was dead."

"Do you think he would have to do it all? I kno w Ben, Hoyt; I've known him a long time.

He's a mighty tough man, grown tougher wit h years, and he plays hard. Believe me, the y got Gib by mistake, but I'd lay a bet h e was on the list to die ... after he'd done his jo b for them."

It made sense, of course. Wilson Hoy t was a man of no illusions, and once he faced th e situation he would see the thing straight. Like man y another man, he faced the fact of chang e reluctantly. He had had two good years i n Rafter, relatively peaceful years, and althoug h he must have known the situation could not last, he ha d been willing to go along with it. His own job wa s to keep the peace, not to be a guardian of moral s ... that was the way he had allowed himself to think.

But now he could no longer stand aside. He ha d made a move; he had averted the calamity of a street battle between miners and cattlemen--an d Eve Bancroft had been killed. He ha d believed it was over then, but here was Mik e Shevlin, assuring him it had only begun.

Lon Court was dead, but that had happened out o f town, and was not his concern. The presence of Lo n Court was, for somebody within the town had brough t him here.

Other books

The Collected Stories by John McGahern
The Talented by Steve Delaney
Handcuffs by Griffin, Bethany
Finally Us by Harper Bentley
The Trouble with Tom by Paul Collins
Whispering Hope by Marsha Hubler
Reckless Assignation by Denysé Bridger