Valley Of the Sun (Ss) (1995) (12 page)

BOOK: Valley Of the Sun (Ss) (1995)
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He slipped his arm around her waist. "Then
. c
onsider your proposal accepted."
.

Sunlight bathed the rim of Black Mesa with a sudden halo. A wide-eyed range
cow lowed softly to her calf, unaware of mystery. The calf stumbled to its feet, brushing a white, curved fragment, fragile as a leaf
.

It was the weathered lip of an ancient baked clay jar
.

*
.

Gila Crossing
.

.

Chapter
I
.

There was an old wooden trough in front of the livery barn in Gila Crossing and at one end of the trough a rusty pump. When Jim Sartain rode up the dusty street, four men, unshaven and tired, stood in a knot by the pump, their faces somber with dejection
.

Two of the men were tall, but in striking contrast otherwise. Ad Loring was a Pennsylvania man, white-haired but with a face rough-hewn and strong. It was a thoughtful face, but resolute as well. The man beside him was equally tall but much heavier, sullen and black-browed, with surly, contemptuous eyes. His jaw was a chunk of granite above the muscular column of his neck. Roy Strider was the kind of man he looked, domineering and quick to use his muscular strength
.

Peabody and Mcationabb were equally contrasting. Mcationabb, as dry and dour as his name suggested, with narrow gray eyes and the expression of a man hard-driven but far from beaten. Peabody carried a shotgun in the hollow of his arm. He was short, and inclined to stoutness. Like the others, he
turned to look at the man on the dusty roan when he dismounted and walked to the pump. The roan moved to the trough and sank his muzzle gratefully into the cool water
.

Sartain was conscious of their stares, yet he gave no sign. Taking down the gourd dipper, he shook out the few remaining drops and began to pump the protesting handle
.

The men studied his dusty gray shirt as if to read his mission from the breadth of his powerful shoulders. Their eyes fell to the walnut-butted guns, long-hung and tied down, to the polished boots now dust-covered, and the Mexican-type spurs. Jim Sartain drank deep of the cold water, a few drops falling down his chin and shirt-front. He emptied two dippers before he stopped drinking
.

Even as he drank, his mind was cataloging these men, their dress, their manner, and their weapons. He was also studying the fat man who sat in the huge chair against the wall of the barn, a man unshaven and untidy, with a huge face, flabby lips, and the big eyes of a hungry hound
.

This fat man heaved himself from his chair. "Put up your hoss, stranger? I'm the liveryman." His shirt bulged open in front and the rawhide thong that served as a belt held his stomach in and his pants up. "Name of George Noll." He added, "Folks around here know me."
.

"Put him in a stall and give him a bait of grain," Sartain said. "I like him well fed. And be careful, he's touchy."
.

Noll chuckled flatly. "Them hammerheads are all ornery." His eyes, sad, curious, rolled to Sartain. "Goin' fer? Or are you here?"
.

"I'm here." Sartain's dark eyes were as unreadable as his face. "Seems to have been some fire around. All the range for miles is burned off." The men beside him would have suffered from that fire. They would be from the wagons behind the firebreak in the creek bottom. "Noticed a firebreak back yonder. Somebody did some fast work to get that done in time."
.

"That was Loring here," Noll offered. "Had most of it done before the fire. He figured it was coming."
.

Sartain glanced at Loring. "You were warned?
.

Or was it an accident?"
.

But it was Strider who spoke.
.

"Accident!" The dark-browed man spat the w
ord
. Then he stared at Sartain, his eyes sullen with suspicion. "You ask a lot of questions for a stranger."
.

Sartain turned his black eyes to Strider and looked at him steadily while the seconds passed, a look that brought dark blood to Strider's face and a hard set to the brutal jaw. "That's right," Sartain said at last. "When I want to know something I figure that's the way to find it out." His eyes swung back to Loring, ignoring Strider
.

"We assume we were burned out by the big ranchers," Loring replied carefully. "We've been warned to leave, but we shall continue to stay. We are not men to be driven from our homes, and the land is open to settlement
.

"Three ranchers control approximately a
. h
undred miles of range. Stephen Bayne,
.

Holston Walker, and Colonel Avery
.

Quarterman. We deliberately chose a
. l
ocation that would interfere as little as possible, moving into the mountainous foothills of Black Mesa, north of the Middle Fork. Despite that, there was trouble."
.

"With the men you named?"
.

"Who else? Bayne accused Peabody of
. b
utchering a B Bar steer, and at Peabody's denial there would have been shooting except that Mcationabb and I were both there. Then a few days ago Peabody and I rode to Oren Mcationabb's place, the brother to this gentleman, and found him dead. He had been shot down while unarmed. His stock had been run off, his buildings burned."
.

"Then there was a rumpus here at the Crossin'," Peabody said. "Loring, Strider, an' me, we jumped Colonel Quarterman on the street. He was mighty stiff, said he knew of no murder and we could get out or take the consequences. Strider here, he came right out an' accused him of murder, then called him out."
.

"He didn't fight?"
.

"He's yeller!" Strider sneered. "Yeller
. a
s saffron! With no riders at his back he'd never raise a hand to no man!"
.

"Sometimes," Sartain replied dryly, "it needs more courage to avoid a fight. If this Quarterman is the one I've heard of, he has proved his courage more than once.
He's a salty old Injun fighter."
.

"So he kills a lone rancher who's unarmed?" Again Strider sneered. The big man's dislike for Jim Sartain was evident
.

"Had you thought somebody else might have done it? Did you find him there? Or any evidence of him or his riders?"
.

"Who else would have done it? Or could have done it?"
.

"You might have."
.

"Me?" Strider jerked as if struck and his
. f
ace went pale, then ugly with fury
.

"Hold your hand, Roy." George Noll was speaking from the barn door, and there was unexpected authority in his tone, casual as it sounded. "Draw on this hombre an' you'll die. He's the Ranger, Jim Sartain."
.

.

Chapter
II
.

Strider's big hand was spread above his gun butt and it froze there, then slowly eased to his side. "Sorry," he said resentfully. "I didn't know you was no Ranger."
.

It was not respect for the law that stopped Strider. Nor was it fear; blustering he might be, but not afraid
.

"I was saying that you might have done it," Sartain repeated, "or Loring, or myself. You have no more evidence against the ranchers than they would have against us."
.

"That's what I've said, Roy," Loring interposed. "We can't go off half-cocked when it will lead to bloodshed. The odds are all against us, anyway. Before we move we must be sure."
.

"This Ranger won't help us any!"
.

Peabody declared. "Who sent for you
..

Quarterman?"
.

"That's right, and that should prove something to you. If he were guilty he wouldn't call in a Ranger, he'd wipe you out himself, and they must muster a hundred riders between them. He thinks there is something else behind this."
.

"He does, does he?" Strider sneered. "All he called you for was to get it done legal."
.

Noll walked up on the other side of the trough. "Hotel up the street. Clean beds, too, an' down thisaway a mite Amy Booth has her eatin' house. Best grub
west o' the Pecos. Reckon I'll see you there."
.

Sartain nodded, then turned back to Loring
.

"You men take it easy. I'll look into this."
.

"An' we starve while you do?" Mcationabb spoke for the first time, bitterness edging his voice. "Man, those wagons you saw belong to us! Those women an' kids are ours! We're nigh out of grub an' our stock's been run off! How can we wait? What can we do? You talk about takin' it easy! Them ain't your womenfolks!"
.

"Will it help if you crowd those cowhands into a gunfight an' get killed? How would your families leave the country then? Who would care for them? Be patient, man!"
.

They were silent, acknowledgment of the truth of what he had said obvious on their faces. Grim, lonely, frightened men. Not frightened of trouble for themselves, for they had known thirst, dust storms, and flash floods, they had fought Indians and hunger. They were frightened of an uncertain future and what would become of their families. "We'll sit tight," Loring said. "I never heard of you giving a man a raw deal yet!"
.

At that moment the three ranchers awaited him at the Longhorn Hotel up the street, and Sartain knew their appearance now would have led to shooting. Furthermore, their riders would be in town tonight, so the situation was like a powder keg
.

The quiet authority he remembered in Noll's voice made him wonder, it was so unexpected. The man seemed to have judgment and might provide the essential balance wheel the community needed
.

Quarterman was a tall man of nearly sixty with a white mustache and goatee. He stood up when Sartain entered, an immaculate man in a black broadcloth coat and white hat. His blue eyes twinkled as he held out his hand. Beside him was a tall girl with dark eyes and hair, her figure lovely. She looked at him, then again. "How are you, Colonel? I'm Sartain."
.

"Recognized you, sir, from stories I've heard. Mr. Sartain, my daughter, Carol." He turned slightly toward a big young man with red hair and a rugged face. "This is Steve Bayne, and the other gentleman"--he indicated a short, powerful man with a broad-jawed face and keen blue eyes--?is Holston
Walker, of the Running W."
.

Jim Sartain acknowledged the introductions, aware of the possessive air adopted by Bayne toward Carol, and to his wry amusement, he found himself resenting it
.

It was Walker who interested him most. Holy Walker was a successful rancher, but stories of his skill with his deadly six-guns were told wherever cowhands congregated, and also of his almost fabulous treatment of his hands
.

As their hands gripped, Sartain thought he had never felt such power latent in any man as in the leonine Walker. His rusty hair showed no hint of gray, and his face was smooth, the skin taut over the powerful bones of his face
.

"There's been a lot of range burned off," Sartain commented. "Who did that?"
.

"The nesters," Bayne said irritably
.

"Who else would do it?"
.

"They claim some of you did it," Sartain suggested mildly. "Maybe you're both wrong."
.

Bayne stared at him. "Who did you come here to act for?" he demanded. "Those infernal nesters or us?"
.

"For neither of you," Sartain replied. "I'm to see justice done, to find who is breaking the law and see they are punished, whoever they may be. The law," he added, "is not an instrument to protect any certain group against another."
.

Bayne turned on Quarterman. "I told you it wouldn't do any good to send for Rangers, Colonel! We could handle this better our own way! Let me turn John Pole loose on them! He'll have them out of here, and mighty fa/!"
.

"Let me hear of you starting anything like that," Sartain said coolly, "and you'll be thrown in jail."
.

Bayne turned on him impatiently. "You fatheaded fool! Who do you think you are? I've fifty riders at my call, and a dozen of them better men than you! We don't need any overrated, blown-up Ranger braggarts to do our fighting!"
.

Sartain smiled. It was a rare smile and had a warm, friendly quality. He glanced at Quarterman, and then his daughter. "Evidently opinions are divided," he said dryly. He turned back to Bayne. "I'm not here to resent your opinions of the Texas Rangers"--there was no smile in his eyes now--?I'm here
to settle your trouble, and I will settle it. However," he added, "if you have any more riders of the quality of John Pole, it's no wonder you've got trouble. He's a known killer, and a suspected rustler. He's been a troublemaker everywhere he's gone. It might go far toward solving the situation if he were fired and packed out of the country."
.

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