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The Ferguson Rifle by Louis L’Amour

You’re more of a woodsman than you look.” He was staring at me, a strange light in his eyes. “Ah? You very much resemble Ronan Chantry,” he said. “In fact,” he peered into my face, “you are Ronan Chantry.” “You have the advantage of me, sir.” “You fought a duel with a friend of mine. I was to have been his second but I was delayed and arrived too late.” “A friend of yours was he? You should choose your friends with more care.” He smiled at me pleasantly enough. “I only regret his marksmanship. Had I been in his place, I would not have missed.” His arrogance angered me. “You had your chance this night, and you did no better.” If I have ever seen death in a man’s glance, it was in his then. “On another occasion I’ll do better. I’ll kill you, my friend, and I’ll enjoy it.” He turned his attention abruptly from me to Lucinda. “You’d do better to come with me,” he said. “I at least might leave you enough for some gowns. That’s more than you’ll have from this rabble.” “They’re gentlemen, sir. Can you say as much?” He shrugged. “I care nothing for gentlemen or otherwise. I’ll have you in a day or two, and whatever goes with you. When I’m through with you, the Indians can have what’s left.” He turned sharply, looking from one to the other of us. “As for you, all that live will be staked to anthills, depend upon it.” Abruptly he mounted his horse, tucking one pistol behind his belt to do so, and without a backward glance, he rode off down the trail.

No one of us moved or spoke for several minutes, and then it was Solomon Talley.

“We’d best not low rate the man. He’s a scoundrel, no doubt of it, but he’s also a damned brave man. It took nerve to ride in here and speak as he did.” I looked over at Lucinda.

“He’s your father’s brother?” “Half-brother, but an enemy to my father from childhood. I remember some word of him now, but I wasn’t often with my father so I knew little of this man.” The rain had stopped and suddenly we had had our fill of the place. With only a few words to be assured that all agreed, we saddled up and started off down the trail, camped in an isolated clump of trees at nearly daybreak, slept three hours, and took to the road once more.

We had deliberately mentioned Ohio, hopeful that our pursuers would try a wrong direction, yet not very hopeful, at that. The Mandan villages were our destination, and it was a long ride and a hard one. First we must find the treasure, if treasure there was, and for that moment Rafen Falvey would be waiting.

Obviously he knew something, but not enough. He needed us to locate it for him, and we had no choice but to find it, and then take our chances on getting away.

I was worried, as I believe we all were.

Rafen Falvey was no mean antagonist.

To take him lightly would invite disaster.

Solomon Talley and I led off. “We must know more about him. How many men he has, how they’re mounted and armed.” “That there’s sensible. Trouble is we ain’t got the time. Seems to me we got to keep movin’, and when we get that gold we got to really light out.” The man to whom we had talked was not only intelligent, but shrewd, a knowing, conniving man and one filled with hatred. We must be on guard every second.

Talley and I discussed the question, and all the while, our eyes and ears were alert for trouble. We believed we had a good lead on them, but to take such a thing for granted was to borrow trouble.

Twice we changed direction. Several times we descended into stream beds and backtrailed, emerging where a rock surface left little in the way of tracks, and then plunged into the deep woods. Deliberately we swung fallen trees across our path, chose unlikely ways, and all the while, we knew we might not be fooling them at all.

Bob Sandy rode right along. That his wound bothered him we knew, but he let us see none of it. “Only one thing to do,” he said.

“We got to lay in wait. We need to pick a good place an’ cut them down as they come into range.” The thought had occurred to me, and I had no qualms about ambush. When facing superior numbers, any tactic is useful, and we knew they outnumbered us, and we also knew their leadership was uncommonly shrewd. However, if we waited in ambush, we would lose whatever distance we had gained, and might ourselves be surrounded and wiped out.

We decided to move on.

Twice during the day I got out the map I had found in Conway’s pocket, but could find nothing in the terrain that corresponded with what the map indicated. Unfortunately, we were moving fast, and I feared the map required a better overall view of the country. I began to get the impression it had been drawn from some vantage point higher than we now were.

There was, of course, the possibility we would find nothing. Two hundred years is a long time, and the Indian or those who told him might have told others. Treasure is ever elusive, a will-o’-the-wisp that has a way of not being where it is supposed to be.

Deliberately I chose a way that took us higher and higher upon the mountain, and when we camped that night, it was in a thick cluster of spruce trees with branches to the ground. To our right and rear there were aspens, a thick stand virtually impossible to penetrate without sound. Before us and beyond the stand of spruce, there was the mountainside falling steeply away and a green and lovely swell of meadow with occasional outcroppings.

“I’d no business getting you into th,” I told them over the fire. “You’d have been trapping beaver by now had I not joined you.” “And I,” Lucinda said.

“It’s nothing.” Degory Kemble waved a hand, dismissing our comments. “We’re learning more of the country, and when we do begin trapping, we’ll be the better for it.” Later, after the sun had gone down and when the land was light, I moved to the edge of the spruce and studied the country and the map.

No man can know a country seen only in daylight. The morning and evening hours are best, for then the shadows have gathered in the depressions, the hollows, and canyons, and the terrain is revealed in a completely different manner. Nor is the light at dawn the same as at sunset, although there are similarities.

Lucinda came out beside me, and we sat there, screened and shadowed by spruce, studying the terrain before us. After a moment, she indicated a shoulder of rock some ten miles off across country to the east and south. “That’s a place I was to look for.

We’re very close.” “What is it we’re to look for? How will we know?” She waited several minutes to reply, and I could understand. Without doubt, it had been drilled into her to tell no one. That she had been told at all was simply the only kind of insurance her father could offer… in the event something happened to him, and to Conway.

Solomon Talley had come up beside her, but she hesitated no longer. “There’s a great slope burned bare above a blue black cliff about twenty feet high. Above the burned area there’s a slope of reddish yellow broken rock.” “Is that all?” I stared at her. I simply could not believe it, nor could Solomon. “Was there nothing more?” “Across the creek bed there was a rocky face with a jagged white streak… like lightning… upon the face of the rock.” Neither of us said a thing. We just stared off across the darkening hills, not knowing whether to laugh or simply throw up our hands. They were just such landmarks as a tenderfoot might choose… and utterly useless.

She looked from Solomon to me. “What’s wrong?” He poked at the ground with a stick, and I said, “Lucinda, in these mountains, and in any lot of mountains, you’ll find a thousand such places. And as for that bare slope… there’s hardly a chance that it’s still bare.” “You mean… you mean it isn’t any good?

We can’t find it?” “I didn’t say that. We do know it’s near here. But you see, that Spanish officer expected to return. He knew the place. The landmarks he chose were no doubt taken quickly, with little time.

He noticed the most obvious things.

“Such slopes are quite common high in the mountains, and as for the white streak, it was undoubtedly quartz and that’s a familiar sight, too. It’s evident this description originated from the Spanish officer. Any Indian with him would have observed differently.” She looked like she had been struck. Her face was pale. “Then we can’t find it?” “One chance in a thousand,” Talley said, “but there must have been something else? Some other thing? A hint of some kind?” “No.” We walked back to the fire and sat down.

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Categories: L'Amour, Loius
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