OLD NATHAN by David Drake

“Better fer some thin others, I reckon,” Old Nathan replied. He clucked the mule to the side, giving the horseman the room he looked like he might need.

Ransden’s manner changed as soon as he heard the cunning man’s voice. “So hit’s you, is it, old man?” he said.

He tugged hard on his reins, twisting his mount across the road in front of Old Nathan. “Hey, easy on!” the horse complained. “No call fer thet!”

“D’ye figger t’ spy on me, feller?” Ransden demanded, turned crossways in his saddle. He shrugged his shoulders, straining the velvet jacket dangerously. “Or—”

Bully Ransden didn’t carry a gun, but there was a long knife in his belt. Not that he’d need it. Ransden was young and strong enough to break a fence rail with his bare hands, come to that. He’d do the same with Old Nathan, for all that the cunning man had won his share of fights in his youth—

And later. It was a hard land still, though statehood had come thirty years past.

“I’m ridin’ on home, Cullen Ransden,” Old Nathan said. “Reckon ye’d do well t’ do the same.”

“By God,” said Ransden. “By God! Where you been to, old man? Hev you been sniffin’ round my Ellie? By God, if she’s been—”

The words echoed in Old Nathan’s mind, where he heard them an instant before they were spoken.

The power that poured into the cunning man was nothing that he had summoned. It wore him like a cloak, responding to the threat Bully Ransden was about to voice.

“—slippin’ around on me, I’ll wring the bitch’s—”

Old Nathan raised both hands. Thunder crashed in the clear sky, then rumbled away in diminishing chords.

The power was nothing to do with the cunning man, but he shaped it as a potter shapes clay on his wheel. He spread his fingers. The tree trunks and roadway glowed with a light as faint as foxfire. It was just enough to throw each rut and bark ridge into relief, as though they were reflecting the pale sky.

“Great God Almighty!” muttered Bully Ransden. His mouth fell open. The string of small fish in his left hand trembled slightly.

“Ye’ll do what to thet pore little gal, Bully Ransden?” the cunning man asked in a harsh, cracked voice.

Ransden touched his lips with his tongue. He tossed his head as if to clear it. “Reckon I misspoke,” he said; not loud but clearly, and he met Old Nathan’s eyes as he said the words.

“Brag’s a good dog, Ransden,” Old Nathan said. “But Hold-fast is better.”

He lowered his arms. The vague light and the last trembling of thunder had already vanished.

The mule turned and stared back at its rider with one bulging eye. “Whut in tar-nation was that?” it asked.

Bully Ransden clucked to his hose. He pressed with the side, not the spur, of his right boot to swing the beast back in line with the road. “Don’t you think I’m afeerd t’ meet you, old man,” he called; a little louder than necessary, and at a slightly higher pitch than intended.

Ransden was afraid; but that wouldn’t keep him from facing the cunning man, needs must—

As surely as Old Nathan would have faced the Bully’s fists and hobnailed boots some moments earlier.

The rushing, all-mastering power was gone now, leaving Old Nathan shaken and as weak as a man wracked with a three-days flux. “Jest go yer way, Ransden,” he muttered, “and I’ll go mine. I don’t wish fer any truck with you.”

He heeled the mule’s haunches and added, “Git on with ye, thin, mule.”

The mule didn’t budge. “I don’t want no part uv these doins,” it protested. “Felt like hit was a dad-blame thunderbolt sittin’ astride me, hit did.”

Ransden walked his nervous horse abreast of the cunning man. “I don’t know why I got riled no-how,” he said, partly for challenge but mostly just in the brutal banter natural to the Bully’s personality. “Hain’t as though you’re a man, now, is it?”

He spurred his horse off down the darkened trail, laughing merrily.

Old Nathan trembled, gripping the saddle horn with both hands. “Git on, mule,” he muttered. “I hain’t got the strength t’ fight with ye.”

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