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Louis L’Amour – Sackett

This was wrong to our way of thinking, but his thinking was altogether different.

The Indian, before the white man took up the West, was physically cleaner than the white man. He bathed often, and it wasn’t until white man’s liquor and poverty caught up with him that he lost the old ways. But the Indian warrior would have been ashamed of all the milk-sop talk about the poor Indian. He was strong, he was proud, and he was able to handle his own problems.

It was Sunday before trouble showed. Sunday was a quiet time for us. Cap was busy scraping and tanning some elk and deer hides, and after cleaning my weapons and catching a bait of trout, I settled down to study Blackstone.

It was a warm, lazy day, with sunlight sparkling on the creek waters, and scarce a breeze stirring the pines overhead. Time to time my thoughts would drift from my study to that high valley. If I wanted to go up and get some of that gold I would have to find another way into that valley before snow fell and closed it off.

“Tell…”

Cap spoke softly, and I got up and walked over to him. He was looking off through the trees, and we could see four riders over by the town site. They turned toward us, and I got out my field glass. There was nothing familiar about any of them. While I watched they started in our direction, and the last man in line checked his pistol.

Down the bench, maybe fifty yards or so, they slowed to a stop, seeing the corral with the horses in it, and the smoke from our fire. Then they came on up.

Me, I was wearing an old U.S. Army hat, a wore-out blue army shirt and jeans, and I had me a belt gun on. When I sighted them coming I taken up my Winchester, and Cap and me stood out to greet them.

” ‘Light,” I said. “Ain’t often we have visitors.”

“Looks of that town site, you must be expectin’ plenty,” one of them said. “What would a man want with a town here?”

“Well, sir,” I said, “we took a notion. Cap Roun-tree an’ me, we like to go to town of an evening when the chores are done. There ain’t no town close up, so we decided to build our own. We laid her out and started cuttin’ timber. Then we held an election.”

“An election?”

“Town ought to have a mayor. We elected Cap by acclamation. Cap never has been a mayor before, and the town never had one. We figured they could start off together.”

While I was talking, I was looking them over. One was riding a horse branded with a pitchfork over a bar. The owner used to call it the Pitchfork Bar, but folks who knew the ways of the outfit called it the Fork Over, because that was what you had to do if you crossed their range. The man on this horse was a big man with a wide face and thick, blond hair. He kept staring at me, and at what remained of my uniform.

There was a stoop-shouldered man with narrow black eyes, and a square-set one with an open, friendly face, and a fat man with a round face— round and mighty hard.

“You must be proud of that uniform,” the big one said. “The war’s been over a long time.”

“Ain’t had money enough to shed it,” I said.

The fat man walked his horse toward the creek, then called back, “Kitch, lookit here!”

They all rode over, and Cap and me followed.

Kitch looked over our shaft, which was only down a few feet. “Gold?” He was amazed “This here’s silver country.”

“Spot of color,” I said. “Nothing much yet, but we’ve got hopes.”

The fat man paid us no mind. “Kitch,” he said, “they’ve got a good thing here. That’s why they’ve laid out the town. Once folks hear of a strike, they’ll come running, and that town will be a gold mine itself.”

“Only there hasn’t been any strike,” Cap said. “We’re scarcely making wages.”

He turned and walked off, saying, “I’ll put some coffee on, Tell.”

At the name, Kitch turned sharply around and looked at me. “Tell? Are you Tell Sackett?”

“Uh-huh.”

He chuckled. “Mister, you’re going to have company. Seen a couple of men in Silverton who were hunting you.”

“I’ll be here.”

“They tell me you can sure run.” Kitch had a mean look to his eyes. “I seen many a-running with that uniform on.”

“All the way to Lee’s surrender,” I said. “We stopped running then.”

He started to say something and his face hardened up and he commenced getting red around the gills.

“The Bigelows say every time you get stopped somewhere they come along and you take out like a scared rabbit.”

Tell Sackett, I told myself, this man aims to get you into a fight. Have no part of it. “Any man who wants to kill me,” I said, “can do it on his own time. I got too many things to do to waste time.”

Cap was back behind the logs near the fire, and I knew what he would be doing back there.

“Now I tell you what you do,” I said. “You go back to Silverton and you tell the Bigelow boys I’m here. You tell them their brother tried dealing off the bottom with the wrong man, and if they’re of a mind to, they can find me here. This is as far as I’m going.”

I added, more quietly, “And, Kitch, you said something about running. You come back with them. I’ll be right here.”

Kitch was startled, then angry. But the fat man spoke up. “Let’s get out of here.”

They started off. Only the square-built man lingered. “Mr. Sackett, I’d like to come back and talk to you, if I may.”

“Any time,” I said, and he rode off.

We worked our claim, got out some gold, and built a rocker. Meanwhile I cut a hidden trail up the steep mountainside behind our camp. About two hundred feet above, covering the bench, I built a rifle-pit, of brush, dead-falls, and rocks—a shelter where two or three men could cover all approaches to our camp.

The following day, switching back and forth to make it an easier climb, I opened a way further up the ridge.

“What’s the idea?” Cap asked me, come nightfall.

“If I have to start running,” I said, “I don’t want anything in the way. I’ve got big feet.”

Over the fire that night, Cap looked at me.

“When you going back up on that mountain?”

“And leave you with trouble shaping up?”

“Forget it Trouble is no stranger to me. You go ahead, only don’t be gone too long.”

I told him I didn’t know exactly how to get up there from where we were. We were close, that much I knew.

Cap said the way I came before, judging from my description, had brought me over Columbine Pass and up to the Vallecitos along Johnson Creek. That was south of us, so if I rode south I might recognize something or come on one of the markers.

The idea of leaving Cap alone worried me. Sure, he was an old wolf, but I had many enemies around, what with the Bigelows, Ben Hobes, and that white-haired kid with the two guns. To say nothing of Tuthill, back in Las Vegas, and his gambler friend. Trouble just naturally seemed to latch onto me and hang on with all its teeth.

On the other hand, Cap had plenty of ca’tridges, he had meat, and there was a spring. Unless they caught him away from camp he could stand off a good-sized force, and we were not expecting anything of the kind.

From worrying about Cap, I turned to thinking back to home, and Tyrel and Dru. It was a fine thing for a man to have a woman love him like that, a fine thing. But who would I ever find? It was complete and total unlikely that any female woman in her right mind would fall into love with the likes of me. It was likely all I’d ever have would be a horse and maybe a dog.

Lying there, I could smell the smoke of the dying fire, see the stars through the tops of the pines, and hear the wind along the ranges. The moon came up and, off to the west, I could see the towering, snow-capped peaks of the Needle Mountains.

Suddenly I sat up. “Cap!” I whispered. “You hear that?”

“I hear it.”

“Sounds like somebody crying.” I got up and pulled on my boots. The sound had died away, but it seemed to have come from somewhere upwind of us.

We walked to the edge of the trees and listened, but we heard it no more. Putting my hands to my mouth, I called, not too loud. “Come on into camp! No use to be out there alone!”

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Categories: L'Amour, Loius
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