Mustang Man by Louis L’Amour

When night came I was far out to the north, and I rode on a few miles and camped on a little creek that emptied into the North Canadian. As I was eight or nine miles from the Rabbit Ears I figured to be pretty safe, so I built myself a fire I could have covered with my hat, and made coffee and broiled myself a steak. I had plenty of fresh meat now, for earlier that day I had killed a yearling buffalo well over to the east.

Just as I was about to pour some coffee, the dun, who was drinking at the creek, suddenly jerked up his head, water dripping from his muzzle, and looked across the creek into the darkness. Before you could say scat I was back in the darkness with my Winchester cocked and ready.

“Hold easy on that trigger, son. I’m huntin’ help, not trouble.”

I knew that voice, and while I lay quiet trying place it in my memory, it spoke again.

“That horse knows me better’n he does you. I gave him to you.”

“Come on out then. Show yourself.”

“You’ll have to give me time. I’m hurt.”

Well, I taken a long chance. That voice did sound familiar, and only one man could know how I got that horse. So I went down to the creek and crossed it.

The old man lay in the grass on the far side of the creek, and he was in bad shape. He had been shot more than once, and his left hand was a bloody mess, but he was game. There was no quit in that old man. His kind come from away up the creek, and he was a tough old mossy-horn with a lot of life in him yet.

So I just picked him up and carried him back to camp. He couldn’t have weighed more than a hundred and thirty soaking wet, and I’d never seen the day when I couldn’t pick up three times that much.

He was in bad shape, but it was his left hand that gave me the turn. Every fingernail was gone, and his ringers all bloody … and that could have been no accident.

“Comanches?” I asked.

“In-laws,” he said grimly. “Sometimes they can be worse.”

“You ain’t related to that Karnes outfit?”

“You met up with them?”

“Uh-huh.”

First off, I filled a cup with hot, black coffee and held it for him to drink. He was shaky, and he needed something to pick up his spirits a mite. He drank it, taking it in his right hand, while I put on some water to heat up to clean him up with.

“Looks to me as if everbody on the Staked Plains is related,” I said, “and all of them after Nathan Hume’s gold.”

“I got a claim to it, better than any of the rest.”

“Better than Penelope?”

“You don’t say. She here?”

“Unless they’ve killed her, she is. She saved my bacon yesterday, and a fine girl she is.”

After he’d drunk the coffee he laid back while I washed out a couple of bullet wounds, neither of them serious, beyond the blood he’d lost. At least, I’d seen men survive worse ones. I always made shift to pack a few wrappings of bandage, for a man on the dodge can’t go running to no doctor. So I fixed up the wounds as best I could, and that hand along with it.

The fingernails had been missing for a while, but crawling through the brush he’d evidently torn open the wounds.

“You must have known something they wanted almighty bad.”

“I should smile, I did. I knew where that gold was. And I know just where that box canyon is.”

“I wonder they let you live.”

“They fired my place and then rode off, leaving me hog-tied in the house. I was out cold and they never figured I’d get out alive. Well, I fooled ’em.”

“Seems like everybody in the country started after that gold all to once.”

“What would you have me do?” the old man said. “I worked with old Nathan when I was a boy, and I had me a mighty good idea where that gold was, but as long as the widow was alive I didn’t figure I had a right to it.

“Others hunted it, but most of them had no idea where to look. I knew how old Nathan thought, and I was sure I could lay hand on the gold. The old man was my cousin, blood-kin, and I was the only one of his flesh who had worked with him. Many a time I went into the San Juans to meet up with the gold traders.

“Them Karneses, they didn’t know where I was until you fetched up to their wagon. When they saw that brand on the dun, NH Connected, they knew it for old Nathan Hume’s brand, and knew that I was somewhere about. That was one of the reasons they wanted to do away with you.”

“Why didn’t you try to get the gold before now?”

He glanced up at me. “You ain’t seen that place yet, nor heard the stories. Well, I heard ’em. Ain’t no Indian alive who will spend a night in that canyon, and mighty few who will even go into it. Evil spirits, they say, and maybe there is.”

“You ain’t told me your name?”

“Harry Mims. Now don’t get me wrong. It wasn’t ha’nts kept me out of that box canyon. Mostly it was Comanches. Why, I’ve lost my outfit twice and nearly lost my hair a couple of times, too.

“One time I was lucky and got right up to the canyon before they come on me. Well, they took my pack outfit and got so busy arguing over the loot that I sneaked off and hid until things quieted down. Took me two weeks to get back to Las Vegas, and when I got there I hadn’t enough money for a meal. I got a job swamping in a saloon, then they moved me up to bartender. Took me six months to get myself an outfit again, what with gambling an’ all.”

“How’d you get clear up here now?”

“A-hossback—how’d you figure? They stole some horses off me, scattered the rest, but those horses come on home, and I caught up a few, saddled up, and rode. I taken me some time, but here I am.”

He lay back, resting. He was in such bad shape I didn’t feel much like asking him more questions. Somebody had been shooting at him more than a little, and he’d wasted away some, riding all that time. It gave a body the shudders to think what that old man had gone through in getting here.

“What do you figure to do now?”

“You ask a fool question like that? I’m going to get that gold, or stop them from getting it, and by the Lord Harry, I’ll kill that Ralph Karnes.”

“What about her?”

Harry Mims was still for a while, and then he looked up at me. “Sackett, I know she needs it, but I can’t bring myself to kill no woman. Why, she was the worst of all when it came to thinkin’ of things to do t’ me. It was her thought of the fingernails, and she did part of it herself.”

I could believe that of Sylvie.

After a while Mims dropped off to sleep, and I covered him up better. He hadn’t told me where his outfit was, but it must be somewhere back in the brush. He couldn’t have come far in the shape he was in, not afoot, anyway.

The death of Nathan Hume’s widow, way back in Virginia, had opened a fancy show out here on the grasslands of the Panhandle. Everybody and his brother was heading right for the gold, and all at the same time. It was just my luck to land right in the middle of it; and here I was, saddled with an old man who needed help the worst way, and maybe with a girl, if I could find her again.

What about those Indian stories? Now, I was never one to doubt anything an Indian told me. Folks would say they were superstitious and all, but behind most of what they believed there was good common sense. I know one time down Mexico way Indians told me they would never go near a certain place, because there were evil spirits around. Come to find out, there had been a smallpox epidemic there, and that was the Indian way of quarantining the place. They thought evil spirits had caused the smallpox …

Well, maybe there was something odd about that box canyon too.

After I’d found Mims’s horses—he had four of them … two pack animals and a spare saddle horse—I went back to the fire and drank some more coffee, then let the flames die down to the coals. Then when it was fairly dark, I moved my bed back into the darkest shadows, where I could see the old man and the firelit space, and where I’d be unseen by anybody scouting the camp.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *