They hupped their mounts forward and rode down to the herd
and began to cut out horses. They were laughing and loudly admiring the fine quality of the animals when Butch shouted, “Riders!”
They were ten or more, at a distance of about a half-mile and
coming at full stride in the moonlight over a bare western rise.
“You
dozen miles eastward of Agnes City. After crossing the hills aflank of
Segur’s rangeland they had borne north for this good hiding place
and arrived as the red sun rose up hugely on their right. Now shafts
of dusty yellow light leaned through the looming elms and sycamores,
and the brothers had seen to their lathered horses and let them water
at the riverbank. They had carefully explored the animals for
wounds and discovered that Butch Berry’s horse had a ball in its
chest. The round wasn’t deeply embedded and Butch extricated it
with a pocketknife and then packed the lightly bleeding wound with
a bandage of river mud.
The Bobby Raines they spoke of had been a wrangler for some
years on a ranch west of the Anderson farm. Both Anderson brothers
were acquainted with him and they had all taken an occasional mug
of beer together. A year ago he received notice that his father had
died and left him the family farm and so he’d headed back home to
Texas. They had not thought of him since—not until last night, when
he had stared up wide-eyed at Jim and Butch even as he crabcrawled
out of the way of their horse.
“I guess he couldn’t tolerate Texas,” Bill said.
He had sobered but little when Mary came running from the springhouse to inform him of the riders. Sprawled in his porch rocker he
squinted in bemusement as she stood over him babbling excitedly.
Then he heard the hooffalls and looked to where she was pointing,
where the trace debouched from the woods, and saw them coming
out of the reddening trees of the late afternoon. More than a dozen
and most with a rifle in hand.
He stood up and felt a nudge at his side and there was Josephine
with his twinbarreled shotgun. “I checked it’s loaded,” she said lowvoiced. Behind her back she held Bill’s fully charged Walker, its massive heft familiar for her shooting lessons with it.
He held the shotgun crosswise at his thighs like an ax-wielder
paused in his labor and watched the riders coming at a trot, every
man of them looking sharply about for telltale of lurking ambush.
He did not recognize any of them and thought they might be jayhawkers who had found them out for Missourians. Two broke off
from the group and hupped their horses to the barn to have a look
within.
Josephine felt Jenny press up close and she cut her eyes to her little sister and whispered, “We ain’t scared even a little bit and don’t
you let them think we are.”
The riders reined up in a loose line in front of the house so each
man’s view of the door and windows was unhampered. Their horses
blew and stamped nervously. Most of the longarms were Sharps and
there were several Texas Colts in evidence among the belt weapons.
Every gaze was wary and hard, but Will Anderson saw no killer’s
eyes among them. He intuited they were not jayhawkers but a posse
of local lawmen and ranchers with a rustling grievance.
“You be Will Anderson?” The man to speak sat his horse directly
before the porch steps. He was lean and gray but not much weathered and wore a closely trimmed mustache.
“Who’s asking?” The man slipped the barest bit out of focus and
Will forced his face to convey alertness, the better to conceal the
whiskey haze in his head.
“John Segur. I own a place south of here, down near Americus.
Rustlers tried to cut out some of my horses last night and my men
chased after them. Two of my boys got their horses killed. One of
them is laying paralyzed in the legs from the fall he took. Bobby
here”—he pointed to a young man with an arm splinted and in a
sling—“got a look at two of the thieves. One he don’t know but one
he does. If you be Will Anderson, the one he knows is your son, the
one they call Jim.”
Segur paused as if he would hear Will Anderson’s protest but
Will held silent. He kept his eyes on Segur and his only thought of
the moment was that if this man told him either of his sons was dead
he would blast him to hell in two halves and damn what came next.
Now the men who had gone to the barn rejoined the party and one
shook his head at Segur.
“I guess your boys ain’t home,” Segur said. He fixed a narrow
look on the dark open doorway for a moment, then said, “Can you
say where they might be?”
Will Anderson slowly shook his head. He felt the porch sway
slightly with the gesture.
His night was sleepless. He sat on the porch with the shotgun
propped close to hand and a jug on his knee and stared out at the
blackness sparking with fireflies. His thoughts caustic and fearful.
He told himself to refrain from rash act, that he’d had enough of
rashness in his life. To hell with Baker and with Segur too. Yankee
sons of bitches didn’t rate notice and never mind their goddam
mouths. . . . Unless they did harm to his sons ...If they put the law
on his boys . . . But they’d have to catch them first, and that would
be a job. . . . Nothing mattered but that his sons avoided harm and
capture. The family could resettle elsewhere. ...Texas...Texas
was the place.
Such were his ponderings in the passing night as he drained one
jug and began on another, waiting to be informed if his sons were
dead or alive, seized or at large.
At daybreak Mary came out with a cup of coffee and set it beside
his rocker, but when she returned a half-hour later with a tinplate of
ham and cornbread the coffee stood cold and untouched.
He gave her no notice. She took up the coffee and left the food in
its place by his chair and sometime later found the tinplate spotless
and knew one of the dogs had been at it. Sometime later, Josie came
out to look at him and then went back in the house and told her sisters there was nothing to do but to let him be. They heard the resentment in her tone. A father ought not to get drunk when he was the
only man around to protect his daughters.
Josie had looped a cord through the Walker’s trigger guard and
the weapon hung ponderously from her neck like an awful responsibility. Mary was three years her elder but was feeling like a child
beside her. The three of them took turns sitting by the front window
where they could keep an eye on their father even as they watched
the trail at the edge of the woods in hope that their brothers would
show up and in fear the Segur men would come back.
Will Anderson’s bewhiskeyed mind is a whirl of visions to which
attach no clarities of thought, although each image is starkly vivid
and each in its turn evokes a sovereign sentiment. Now he sees Segur
sitting his horse and flanked by his henchmen, again hears him make
threat on his boys, and again tastes a bilious resentment through the
mash on his tongue. Now he catches sight of Bill and Jim hanging by
their necks from a tree in some desolate landscape ruled by crows
and again feels his heart flail with fear. He envisions young Martha
in the moonlit window of her parents’ house saying yes she will go
with him and be married in Saint Louis, and his chest goes hollow as
a waiting grave. He once more perceives Arthur Baker courting
Mary under the Anderson roof and telling his smiling lies, again sees
the man’s letter and its oily mendacities, and again seethes in his
injured honor. One vision follows another before his inward eye,
round and round and then round again, all through the morning as
he takes drink on drink.