The Daybreakers by Louis L’Amour

somewhere, but pretty soon I began to get a feeling I didn’t like very much.

Sometimes a man’s senses will pick up sounds or glimpses not strong enough to

make an impression on him but they affect his thinking anyway. Maybe that’s all

there is to instinct or the awareness a man develops when he’s in dangerous

country. One thing I do know, his senses become tuned to sounds above and below

the usual ranges of hearing.

We caught, of a sudden, a faint smell of dust on the air. There was no wind, but

there was dust. We walked our horses forward and I watched Sate’s ears. Those

ears pricked up, like the mustang he was, and I knew he was aware of something

himself.

My eyes caught an impression and I walked my horse over for a look where part of

the bark was peeled back from a branch. There were horses’ tracks on the ground

around the bush.

“Three or four, wouldn’t you say, Tyrel?”

“Five. This one is different. The horses must have stood here around two hours,

and then the fifth one came up but he didn’t stop or get down.”

Several cigarette butts were under a tree near where the horses had been

tethered, and the stub of a black cigar. We were already further north than we

had planned to go and suddenly it came to me. “Orrin, we’re on the Alvarado

grant.”

He looked around, studied our back trail and said. “I think it’s Torres.

Somebody is laying for him.”

He walked his horse along, studying tracks. One of the horses had small feet, a

light, almost prancing step. We both knew that track. A man who can read sign

can read a track the way a banker would a signature. That small hoof and light

step, and that sidling way of moving was Reed Carney’s show horse.

Whoever the others had been, and the chances were Reed Carney had joined up with

Fetterson and Pritts, they had waited there until the fifth man came along to

get them. And that meant he could have been a lookout, watching for the man they

were to kill.

Now we were assuming a good deal. Maybe. But there was just nothing to bring a

party up here … not in those days.

Orrin shucked his Winchester.

It was pine timber now and the trail angled up the slope through the trees. When

we stopped again we were high up and the air was so clear you could see for

miles. The rim was not far ahead. We saw them.

Four riders, and below on the slope a fifth one, scouting. And off across the

valley floor, a plume of dust that looked like it must be the one who was to be

the target.

The men were below us, taking up position to cover a place not sixty yards from

their rifles. They were a hundred feet or so higher than the rider, and he would

be in the open.

Orrin and me left our horses in the trees. We stood on the edge of the mesa with

a straight drop of about seventy feet right ahead of us, then the talus sloped

away steeply to where the five men had gathered after leaving their horses tied

to the brush a good hundred yards off.

They were well concealed from below. There was no escape for them, however,

except to right or left. They could not come up the hill, and they could not go

over the rim. Orrin found himself a nice spot behind a wedged-up slab of rock.

Me, I was sizing up a big boulder and getting an idea. That boulder sat right on

the edge of the mesa, in fact it was a part of the edge that was ready to fall

… with a little help.

Now I like to roll rocks. Sure, it’s crazy, but I like to see them roll and

bounce and take a lot of debris with them. So I walked to the rim, braced myself

against the trunk of a gnarled old cedar and put my feet against the edge of

that rock.

The rider they were waiting for was almost in sight. When I put my boots against

that rock my knees had to be doubled up, so I began to push. I began to

straighten them out. The rock crunched heavily, teetered slightly, and then with

a slow, majestic movement it turned over and fell.

The huge boulder hit with a heavy thud and turned over, gained speed, and rolled

down the hill. The riders glanced around and seemed unable to move, and then as

that boulder turned over and started to fall, they scattered like sheep.

At the same instant, Orrin lifted his rifle and put a bullet into the brush

ahead of their horses. One of the broncs reared up and as Orrin fired again, he

jerked his head and ripping off a branch of the brush, broke free and started to

run, holding his head to one side to keep from tripping on the branch.

The lone horseman had come into sight, and when he stared up the mountain, I

lifted my hat and waved, knowing from his fawn-colored sombrero that it was

Torres. Doubtfully, he lifted a hand, unable to make us out at that distance.

One of the men started for their horses and Orrin put a bullet into the ground

ahead of him and the man dove for shelter. Orrin levered another shot into the

rocks where he disappeared then sat back and lighted up one of those Spanish

cigars.

It was downright hot. Settling in behind some rocks I took a pull at my canteen

and figured down where they were it had to be hotter than up here where we had

some shade.

“I figure if those men have to walk home,” Orrin said, “It might cool their

tempers some.”

A slow half hour passed before one of the men down below got ambitious. My rifle

put a bullet so close it must have singed his whiskers and he hunkered down in

the rocks. Funny part of it was, we could see them plain as day. Had we wanted

to kill them we could have. And then we heard a horse coming through the trees

and I walked back to meet Torres.

“What happens, señor?” He looked sharply from Orrin to me.

“Looks like you were expected. Orrin and me were hunting a place for ourselves

and we found some tracks, and when we followed them up there were five men down

there.” I showed him where. Then I explained our idea about the horses and he

agreed.

“It will be for me to do, señor.”

He went off down the slope and after awhile I saw him come out of the trees,

untie the horses and run them off.

When Torres rode back Orrin came up to join us. “It is much you have done for

me,” Torres said. “I shall not forget.”

“It is nothing,” I said, “one of them is Reed Carney.”

“Gracias, Señor Sackett,” Torres said. “I believed I was safe so far from the

hacienda, but a man is safe nowhere.”

Riding back toward Mora I kept still and let Orrin and Torres get acquainted.

Torres was a solid man and I knew Orrin would like him, and Torres liked people,

so the contrary was true.

Torres turned off toward the ranch and we rode on into Mora. We got down in

front of the saloon and strolled inside. It took one glance to see we weren’t

among friends. For one thing there wasn’t a Mex in the place and this was mostly

a Mexican town, and there were faces I remembered from Pawnee Rock. We found a

place at the bar and ordered drinks.

There must have been forty men in that saloon, a dusty, dirty lot, most of them

with uncut hair over their collars, and loaded down with six-shooters and bowie

knives. Fetterson was at the other end of the bar but hadn’t seen us.

We finished our drinks and edged toward the door and then we came face to face

with Red … the one my horse had knocked down at Pawnee Rock.

He started to open his mouth, but before he could say a word, Orrin clapped him

on the shoulder. “Red! You old sidewinder! Come on outside and let’s talk!”

Now Red was a slow-thinking man and he blinked a couple of times, trying to

decide what Orrin was talking about, and we had him outside before he could

yell. He started to yell but Orrin whooped with laughter and slapped Red on the

back so hard it knocked all the breath out of him. Outside the door I put my

knife against his ribs and he lost all impulse to yell. I mean he steadied down

some.

“Now wait a minute,” he protested, “I never done you boys any harm. I was just—”

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