The Haunted Mesa by Louis L’Amour

“But it ain’t just that one spot. There’s forty or fifty square miles of country it’s best to leave alone. Not to say I was never there. I got in there a time or two. There was an old Injun, a fine old man. Knowed him for years before he said anything to me about that there place.

“He said there was a ‘way,’ whatever that meant, but all those who knew how to use it were gone. It was a clan secret an’ the clan died out. Or was killed off by somebody who wanted the ‘way’ kept secret.”

He pushed the canvas toward Mike Raglan. “Stick this inside your shirt an’ never let anybody know you got it. There’s those would kill to get their hands on it, and it would serve them right. That’s why I never told nobody until now.

“I’m an old man, boy. I seen the sun set over that red rock country many’s the time. I seen men go into that country who never came back. I’ve knowed others who come back stark ravin’ mad, memory gone an’ their wits along with it.

“There’s another world over there somewheres. At least there’s a way to get to it. Like them Spanish men in their iron suits. They seen the Seven Cities of Cibola. They really seen ’em! They weren’t lookin’ at any pueblos with the sun on ’em. They just happened to see through the veil. Somehow it was open then and they seen right through and never got over what they seen!

“They are there, boy! I seen ’em, too! But there’s evil over there, evil like you an’ me can’t even imagine. It was that ancient evil that drove the cliff dwellers into this world, comin’ through, as they said it, a hole in the ground.

“In their kivas, their ceremonial centers, there’s what they call a sipapu. It’s a hole in the floor that symbolizes how they escaped from the evil. But that evil is still over there, son, an’ don’t you forget it!”

That had been a long time ago, and Mike Raglan had told the story to no one, not even to Erik Hokart. Yet he had warned Erik about the country. He had advised him to forget it, to choose any other place, but Hokart would not listen.

Later, on that same early trip, he had mentioned the mesa to Jack. “No Man’s Mesa,” the old miner said. “We camp near there tomorrow night, if we’re lucky.” He shook his head. “There’s not much in the way of roads—some trails and wagon routes the Navajos use. I been through there a-horseback but never with a car. You may have to walk ahead an’ scout a route, roll rocks out of the way and such. It’s mighty rough country.”

“Know anything about that mesa?”

Jack was a long time in replying. Finally he shrugged. “Just a big chunk of rock, talus slopes, sheer rock around the rim. Kind of out-of-the-way and nobody pays it much mind.”

Indicating one of Jack’s Paiute friends, Mike suggested: “Ask him if he knows anything about it.”

Jack waved a hand, his manner just a little too casual. “Nothing to ask, and don’t look for it on a map. Chances are they’ll have it in the wrong place, even in the wrong state.”

“I am curious.”

“Ask a Hopi then. They’ve been here forever. My advice is to forget it.”

“I want to climb it. See what’s on top.”

“You’re crazy, Mike. Let well enough alone.”

Climb it he had, but that was another story and too long ago. He had covered a lot of country since then, had grown older and, he hoped, wiser.

He got back in the car and locked the doors, then leaned his head back. He was tired, really tired. Where the devil was Erik? All he wanted now was a quiet meal and his bed at Tamarron. No, he would settle for the bed. He could eat tomorrow.

He sat up, started the car, and drove slowly, carefully along the road toward the San Juan. The long mesa from which he had seen the flare towered over him now, dark and threatening. The northern tip of the mesa loomed against the sky like the prow of a giant ship.

Peering ahead he could see the gleam of water. That would be the San Juan River, or water backed up by Glen Canyon Dam. He had not been in this country since the dam was built. He started to get out of the car, then paused, taking time to thread his belt through the holster loop and buckle up again. He wore the holster on his left side, situated for a cross-draw or a left-hand draw if necessary.

Often he climbed into high, relatively inaccessible places and habitually carried the gun as a protection against an inadvertent meeting with a bear or mountain lion. The chance of such an encounter was slight, but after one near brush with a lion he had gone prepared. He had no desire to kill anything nor did he have any desire to be a chance victim. The gun had a reassuring feel. He stepped down from the car and closed the door softly behind him.

With the sound there was a scurry of movement off in the dark, a rattle of pebbles, then silence. His hand on his gun, he waited.

He was not the sort to shoot at any sound, nor at anything he could not identify, but the movement disturbed him. It might have been a coyote but his impression was of something larger.

For a long time he waited. It was unlike Erik Hokart, who was meticulous about keeping appointments. He paced the road near the car. It was cold, as desert nights were apt to be. He put his hand on the door handle. Suddenly, from the edge of the mesa towering above him, there was a brilliant flare. Only a momentary flash, yet for that instant it shed a white radiance all around, and then, just as suddenly, it was gone.

In the utter darkness that followed, the desert seemed to scurry with life. He glimpsed vaguely a rush of naked figures, and something smashed hard into the side of his car. He turned sharply and for an instant stared into the wide, expressionless eyes of a naked creature. It seemed not to see him at all, but scrambled around his car and ran off into the night, leaving behind a heavy fetid odor as of something dead.

Then the creatures—or men, or whatever they were—vanished into the night and he was alone. Only the odor lingered.

There were far-off retreating sounds, then silence. He shuddered, then got quickly into his car and closed the door, locking it. It had happened so suddenly there had been no chance for fear. Shaken, he turned the car about and drove back to Tamarron, where he was staying.

The drive was long and day was breaking before he drew up in front of the lodge. Leaving the motor running, he went to the desk for his mail before driving on to the condominium. There was a handful of letters and a small packet wrapped in brown paper and tied with string. It bore no stamps and no postmark.

He recognized the handwriting and turned back to the desk clerk. “When did this come? Were you here when it was delivered?”

“It was about ten o’clock last night. I asked if she wanted me to inquire whether you were in or not, but she shook her head. She just put the package on the counter, looked at me strangely, then turned away. When she got to the door she turned and looked around—not just at me, at everything.”

“You seem to have paid attention.”

She flushed. “Well … she was strange, somehow.”

“Strange?”

“She was very beautiful, exotic-looking. Like nobody around here. I thought at first she was an Indian, but not like any I ever knew. But it was the way she looked at me, but not really at me, at my face, my hair, my clothes.”

“Why not? You’re an attractive girl.”

“It wasn’t that. She looked at me like she had never seen anyone or anything that looked like me. I mean that, seriously.”

Once at the condominium he tossed the packet on the bed, and his .357 magnum alongside it. The important thing now was rest. The long flight from New York, the resulting jet lag, and the long drives at night had him ready for collapse.

He was getting into bed when the telephone rang.

“Mr. Raglan?” It was the girl at the desk. “I thought you had better know. There was a man in here just now asking for that package you picked up. He said he was to deliver it to you.”

“What did you tell him?”

“That you had picked it up, of course. Then he asked where the girl was who delivered it.” She paused. “Mr. Raglan, you will think me a fool, but he frightened me. I have no idea why, but something about him frightened me.”

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