the High Graders (1965) (22 page)

Read the High Graders (1965) Online

Authors: Louis L'amour

BOOK: the High Graders (1965)
13.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He needed more than one, when it came to that. H
e found himself searching their faces for some hint of wha t he sought, but he did not find it.

Red was not among them, and that worried him, fo r Red should have been here.

He waited for the last mule and rider to pass , and let dust settle behind them. The thought cam e into his mind that he had always expected to wind u p dead in a canyon somewhere, and this might be the time.

He let his horse take its own pace , unworried, for he knew the trail and nobod y could go anywhere but straight along. Just short o f midway there was a cutoff he would take, bu t nobody else would be apt to find it without bein g shown.

The sun came up behind clouds that steadil y grew darker. There had been rain clouds ove r Rafter, but they had been a good while catchin g up. Somewhere ahead he could expect attac k by Hollister and his men.

Ben Stowe expected it and, knowing Hollister , Mike was sure it would come. Who would Holliste r have with him? Babcock, of course, and some of the othe r soreheads. But how many? And where would it be?

Hollister, he felt sure, would not know of thi s trail, nor even Babcock. They had neve r been on good terms with Rafter, and their range ha d been far from here.

It was a steep, climbing trail, with many a switch-back and double. It had been mad e by Indians or mountain sheep, and it was the onl y way across the mountain for miles in either direction.

The higher slopes were covered with stunted pines an d juniper; the canyons fell away from the trai l to the bottom of steep cliffs. Here and there rounde d hills rose by the trail, and they offered invitin g chances to escape it, but they were all deceptive , ending in sheer cliffs or slides o f shifting rock.

Presently rain began to fall, scattere d drops at first, followed by a steady downpour.

Shevlin drew up, got out his slicker, and sli d into x. Up ahead he could see the others doing th e same.

Occasionally the leaders would draw up to catch thei r wind, and the party would close up. Shevlin watche d for the turn-off ... he had rarely come this way, an d he was worried that he might miss it. It was a steep, alternate route that cut a good mile of f the distance. There was no other chance to get ahead, an d that was where he needed to be.

He saw the twisted, lightning-struck pine o n the ridge only a moment before he saw the slid e of shale. The slide slanted up steeply, endin g against the sky. It was a stiff scramble for a goo d horse--not over sixty feet of shale, but i t appeared to go nowhere, and certainly was a n unlikely beginning for a trail.

The big horse took it without urging. O
n top of the slide was a ridge of slate, slantin g back less steeply. Here, barely visible, wa s a narrow way worn by years of passing, bu t invisible to any but a trained eye. This was th e cutoff, and the horse took to it readily.

Beyond lay a vast jumble of grass-covere d slopes, pine-crested ridges, dee p canyons, knolls covered with jagged, broke n rock. It was a place where no man seemed to hav e come, a wild and lonely place, high under th e gray clouds, with only the whispering rain and the soun d of his horse's hoofs to attend him.

Eight miles away, Ray Holliste r crouched in the slight shelter of a wind-hollowe d cliff. He hadn't shaved in a week, and hi s jaws itched; his mouth felt gritty. It wa s damp and chilly, and the coffee was made from ground s used for the third time.

He looked at Halloran, who was stretche d out, comfortably asleep, and he felt a sudden , vicious urge to kick him awake. John Sand e was a dozen yards off, huddled under a falle n oak, its branches so matted with driftwood tha t no rain came through. Babcock sat near him , nursing the fire with sticks.

Hollister spoke suddenly. "Where the hel l are they? If they left town like Jess said, the y should be here!"

Babcock glanced over at him. "Ray, i f that old wolfer said they left town, they left,"
a nd then he added, in a milder tone, "and don'
t rile him. He's likely to cut out and leav e us."

Just then Jess Winkler came down through th e rocks across the hollow, and came over to where the y waited.

"They foxed us," he said, grinning at them. Hi s broken, yellowed teeth showed under the gra y mustache. "They surely did!"

Before Hollister could speak, Babcock said , "How could they? This is the only trail."

"No, it ain't. Winkler squatted on hi s haunches. "I keep forgettin' about that kid, tha t Shevlin."

"He's no kid," John Sande commented. "I s een him. He's got shoulders like two of us."

"I think of him as a kid," Winkler said.

"That was how I knowed him afore. Now I kee p forgettin' how canny that youngster was, an' how h e prowled these mountains. He's taken them ove r Lost Cabin."

"Never heard of it," Babcock said.

"Lost Cabin trail ... it's an ol d Indian trail. Somebody built a stone cabi n up there, built it long before any white man wa s knowed to be in this country. Built it an' lef t it. Why, I ain't seen that trail in sixteen , seventeen years!"

"What do we do now?" Halloran said , sitting up.

Winkler took up a twig and marked on th e sand. "That trail goes about so." He dre w another line to indicate the railroad, and a cross where Tappan Junction stood. "They'l l be headin' for there. If we haul out of here now , we can nest down in a packet of boulders abou t here." He made another cross in the sand. "W
e can make it in about an hour, if we're lucky , and that would be maybe an hour before they do."

They were gone, and their fire was dying to coals , hissing under occasional drops of rain, when a rider passed on the trail, not more than thirt y yards off. It was Ben Stowe, wearing a ne w yellow slicker, his hat brim tilted down.

For the first time in months he felt content. H
e was up in the saddle again, and he was riding away fro m trouble. Of course, there would be trouble aplenty a t Tappan Junction, but it was the kind o f trouble for which he was well prepared and which h e clearly understood. Also, within a few minutes , unless his calculations had gone astray, part of hi s work would be done for him somewhere back in the hill s ... or perhaps out on the bunch-grass levels wher e the tracks were laid.

Somewhere along the line Ray Hollister would com e upon Mike Shevlin, and in the gun battle that mus t surely follow, men would die on both sides , and every man who died made his own problem that muc h simpler.

He had a good horse under him, and n o slow-moving pack mules to worry about. A t Wood's Ranch he would swap horses , exchanging the sorrel he now rode for a toug h buckskin he had kept at the ranch, and he woul d make fast time down to the Junction. He would b e waiting there with the contents of that bundle behind hi s saddle, and after that the gold would be his and his alone.

An hour after he rode past the dyin g campfire, unaware that it was there, two othe r riders came along. By that time the fire wa s entirely out--only the blackened coal s remained.

Laine Tennison was more angry than frightened , but Red was triumphant. His triumph, however , was beginning to wear thin, for he was no longer so sur e that he had judged right in kidnaping this girl.

It had been simple enough, back there at th e Nevada House. He knew that Lain e Tennison represented trouble, and he ha d guessed she was one of the owners of the mines, or wa s associated with them. He had acted promptly , and upon impulse, as he did most things.

Mike Shevlin was gone, and it could only be th e girl in the room. He had detected a fain t perfume near the door that told him his guess wa s right. After discovering that the door was barred from within , he decided that by morning she would be hungry. H
e had simply knocked on the door shortly afte r daylight and said. "Mr. Shevlin, your breakfas t is here."

Nobody he knew had ever had breakfas t served in his room, but she was a city girl an d might not know it wasn't done at the Nevad a House. With a slight clatter he put down som e dishes he had brought up for the purpose, the n walked away and tiptoed back.

Laine
. W
as hungry. After a moment or tw o she opened the door, and he forced his wa y in before she could close it.

And now he had her here, on the roa d to Tappan Junction.

He had been sure that Ben Stowe would b e pleased, but now he was beginning to worry. Ben was a man who liked to order things his own way. It wa s too late, however, to think about that--there was nothin g to do but ride on.

Chapter
19

When Mike Shevlin rode out of the dark pine s he faced a vast green slope, perhaps a thousan d acres of untouched grass, slanting away from th e rounded crest of the mountain toward the dark canyo n off to his left.

To his right and well ahead of him, three dar k jagged crags tore at the sky, trailin g drifts of windblown cloud like streamers o f smoke. The rain was a gray veil, the grass a brilliant green, while the sky was masked wit h lowering thunderheads.

There was no wind on this slope shielded by th e mountain, but he was chilly under the slicker; and hi s wet hands worried him, for if he needed a gu n he would need it fast--and with accurate aim.

It took a long time to cross the wide gree n slope. At the end it fell sharply away into th e last canyon before Lost Cabin, and he dre w rein here and sat his horse, looking across at th e squat gray shape, tantalized as always by th e wonder of it. Who had found this wild and lonel y place so long ago?

At this point he was over a mile higher tha n Rafter Crossing, and a good thousand feet above th e trail followed by the pack mules. There might b e accidents due to the weather, but there was no danger o f them going astray.

Nobody he knew at Rafter had ever see n Lost Cabin, and he himself had not talked of it , wishing jealously to keep this place for himself. Man y knew about the Cabin, some scarcely believing i n it; but there it was, on the slope across th e canyon, under the shadow of ancient trees. A d warfish army of cedars was massed not far below it, a s if waiting to leap upon it in some moment of stillness.

At last Shevlin was angling steeply down , searching out the old trail, glad that he had a goo d mountain horse, when he saw them. At first h e could not believe his eyes.

He drew up sharply, peering down at th e five riders coming out of the draw, about a mil e away. He saw them begin to fan out among th e rocks and trees.

They were not more than a hundred yards from th e trail, which at that point came out into the open for a good half-mile, just beyond the low glacial ridg e where the five were taking shelter.

Their backs were to him--but for how long? If the y happened to turn he could be plainly seen up here.

He had to get off this slope and into the trees.

Jess Winkler ... Of course. He should hav e thought of the old wolfer who had been riding thes e hills for years. Winkler must be down there.

Nobody else could have known of the trail the mule s were using; and the trail these five had taken to ge t here from below must be one even Shevlin knew nothin g of.

He walked his horse along the slope and go t into the trees without being seen. Then, screened by th e dripping trees, he rode at a dead run , racing against time. If the pack train had had n o trouble they would soon be along, riding like sittin g pigeons into the range of Hollister's guns.

Against the five men down there, he had the nin e with the pack train. But they would be scattered ou t along the line of mules, and the first volley woul d surely eliminate some of them unless they could b e warned.

Hollister was a fair hand with a rifle, good with a six-gun. And Winkler--well, Winkler woul d never miss. When he aimed from a rest, h e killed. Babcock was good too, and the others wer e probably at least average.

He raced his horse for about a quarter of a mile, slowed to a walk over more difficul t ground, and then raced on. He came out of th e trees behind Hollister and his men, and a good tw o hundred yards away. He could see them settle d down and waiting, and just as he had spotted the fift h man, the first of the pack mules came into sight.

The first man in the pack train was a tall , lean, stoop-shouldered Texan; there were si x mules before the second man appeared. In a matter of minutes they would all be strung ou t along the trail, and helpless. And he knew tha t Hollister would hold his fire until all were withi n easy range.

Mike Shevlin felt a curious emptines s inside him. He knew what was coming.

You could die down there, he told himself. H
e tugged on his hat brim and started down the slop e behind the waiting men.

His horse walked quickly, daintily. Shevli n touched a flank lightly with a spur, and the hors e began to canter. The five men below were fixing al l their attention on the approaching mule train.

Suddenly one of the men with the mule train sa w Shevlin, and drew up sharply. At the sam e instant, Shevlin shucked a six-shooter an d slapped the spurs to his horse.

The startled animal almost leaped from under him, the n went pounding down the slope, running like the wind.

There came a startled exclamation, and one o f Hollister's men whirled toward him, and Mik e let go his first shot.

Other books

The Malhotra Bride by Sundari Venkatraman
Undenied by Sara Humphreys
Four New Words for Love by Michael Cannon
Scandal in Copper Lake by Marilyn Pappano
Ransomed Jewels by Laura Landon
Poughkeepsie by Debra Anastasia
Sleeping With the Boss by Marissa Clarke
Just One Season in London by Leigh Michaels
Luciano's Luck by Jack Higgins