Louis L’Amour – Flint

He crawled into the brush, and looked up to see Flint bearing down upon him. He whipped up his rifle and, springing free of the tangle, shot from the hip while he was still moving. Flint disappeared. Buckdun slipped into a deep crack in the lava, hung by his fingers, then let go and dropped to the bottom. He ran in the direction from which the shots had come, emerging in a rock-choked basin with high walls. Another bullet smashed near him; he squeezed between two rocks, gasping for breath and sobbing with fury.

He stopped to reload, although there were still shells in the chamber. That Flint — there was a wicked bite to those shots he was firing, and his rifle obviously packed tremendous power.

Buckdun looked at the back of his hand and there was a streak of bloody flesh across three knuckles.

I’m getting out of here, he told himself suddenly. To hell with it, and to hell with them.

Buckdun dropped to his hands and knees and crawled into the blackness of a cave in the basin wall. There was a shard of ancient pottery there, and an arrowhead of a kind he had never seen. He knelt with his rifle and waited. The rain fell unceasingly, although without its earlier violence. The thunder sulked in the distance, and the sky was low and gray, clouds swollen with rain. It could not be long until dark.

He had no idea where he was.

Flint was exhausted. He moved into the area from which he had driven Buckdun, and picked up the battered cup. The haversack which Buckdun had carried was there, and he found the small cache of tea and made a cup for himself. It had been sheer luck that he found a way down from the cliff, and happened to see the fault blue of smoke against the clouds and rain.

Yet he dared not stay here. He gulped the tea, then dropped the cup and moved away. He limped badly, for his shin was black and hugely swollen where the rock had struck it. His palms were torn from scrambling in the lava, and his knees skinned. His muscles were heavy with weariness and he had no idea how much country he had covered.

The rain still fell, and he felt as if he carried the burden of the storm on his sagging shoulders. The rifle was heavy and he had lost one of his pistols — somewhere back in the basin pasture, he thought.

Flint wanted shelter and he wanted rest. He took a sight on the cliff from which he had first descended and started back, working his way with less caution than the situation demanded. He knew he had driven Buckdun to ground somewhere in the rock, but he was not up to standing by, keeping alert for any move.

He dearly wanted rest.

It was two miles to the basin pasture and he made it there, falling only once. He ripped his pant leg again and tore the flesh of his knee wickedly, ripping it deep this time.

He climbed back down into the basin. The horses were huddled at the ice cave, and he avoided them. He would get back into the hideout and have a fire. He would be warm once more, even if it was the last time. He scarcely could remember a time when he had not been cold and wet.

All through the bitter, long day they had run, climbed, and exchanged shots. He had come close … perhaps Buckdun was wounded.

He got back to the rock house and built a roaring fire. He pulled off his clothing and rubbed himself dry with a blanket. Then he dressed again, in dry clothes, still shivering with cold. He made coffee, and put the beans on to warm up, dumping the can into the pot and then, after a thoughtful look, another can.

He seated himself on the bunk and wiped his rifle dry, running a patch through the barrel. Then he dried the Smith & Wesson and checked the loads. He unloaded and reloaded the rifle after wiping the ammunition for fear some dirt had gotten on it during the wild flight of the day.

He barred the door. The window was too small for anything larger than a cat, and the entrance through the manger next to impossible to find, but he blocked that door also.

When at last he fell upon the bunk and pulled the blankets around him he was still shaking with cold, and he was exhausted.

Nancy Kerrigan was in Alamitos when Buckdun rode into town. Along the street people stopped and stared or peered from windows. The big gunman was dog-weary and soaked to the hide. One hand was wrapped in a rough bandage and his face was drawn and haggard.

He drew up at the general store and half-fell from the saddle. He stopped on the walk, under the awning on which the rain drummed, and looked up and down the street, then went inside. He bought two boxes of shells, then said, “Got any dynamite?”

He bought fifty sticks, and the caps and fuses to go with them. Wrapped in an extra slicker to keep it dry, and with a new slicker for himself he was ready to go back. Instead he went to the livery barn, put up his horse and returned to the Grand Hotel. Within minutes he was stretched out and sound asleep.

Nancy Kerrigan went to the store. “Howard, what did that man buy?”

“Shells. He bought shells and he bought some dynamite, ma’am,” Howard said. “I’d say he had something holed up he wanted to blast out.”

Nancy left quickly and went to the Divide Saloon. At the door she paused. No one was there whom she could send inside. Gathering her skirts, she pushed open the door.

“Red,” she called, “is Milt Ryan in there? Or any of my outfit?”

There was the scrape of a chair, and Ryan showed up in the door. “Howdy, ma’am. Something wrong?” Rockley and Gaddis were behind him.

“Milt, could you backtrack Buckdun? He’s gone to the hotel, and from his looks I’d say he was dog-tired and ready for bed. I want to backtrack him. He’s got Jim Flint holed up somewhere and he’s bought dynamite.”

“Dynamite? Well, now.”

Ryan squinted at the street and at the rain coming down. “Reckon I could, ma’am. If the rain down that-away hasn’t washed his tracks plumb out.”

“Pete,” Nancy said, “get your horses. Get mine, too. We’re going to find him. I’ll have no man blasted with dynamite. At least” — she looked at Pete and smiled — “not a man that good.”

Pete Gaddis hesitated. He glanced at Rockley and at Milt Ryan. “There’s an easier way, ma’am,” Pete said. “We can go get Buckdun.”

“No. You’d get him but one of you might be killed. No, we’ll find Flint and take him to the Kaybar.”

Nancy Kerrigan had made one stop — at the general store — and bought a rifle. Her own was back at the ranch. Then they started south, holding to a space-eating trot.

The men exchanged looks and Milt Ryan’s icy eyes showed a touch of amusement and of genuine pleasure.

There was no trouble with the trail, for the Buck-dun horse had been stepping out and its hoofs had taken a deep bite. Nor had anyone else been along since the rain. When the tracks ended they could see where the horse had stood for some time.

“I’d say that there horse was here most of the day,” Milt said.

“There were shots earlier,” Rockley said. “When I went back in the Hole after the horses I could hear shooting, off in the lava somewhere.”

Buckdun had seen no necessity to conceal his trail. The tracks led to the lava beds and right to the crack in the rock.

“We’re facing up to trouble, ma’am,” Rockley advised. “That Buckdun, he’ll come back down here. I figure he won’t sleep more than a couple of hours at most, because he figures he’s got his man where he wants him. He won’t take kindly to us messing around with his affairs.”

“We will brand that steer when we get to it,” Nancy replied. “Let’s get inside.”

They started along the crack, but coming to the fallen boulder, they halted, made doubtful by its presence. Then they went on, and entered the small basin.

There was the garden, its neat rows of crops weeded and tended, but there was no sign of a horse, and at first they did not see the walled-up overhang where the house was. Milt Ryan worked his way over there and they gathered around.

“A body would be a fool to go to pounding on that door,” Rockley commented, “with an upset man in there expecting trouble. Most likely he will shoot right through it.”

Nancy did not reply. She walked up and, standing to the side of the door, she reached over and rapped loudly. “Jim! Jim Flint!”

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