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The Lonely Men by Louis L’Amour

Harry stay on the black.

What I wanted most just now was to get out of these mountains and head off

across the flatland, and maybe get to a ranch. But I had a time keeping my

thoughts on my business with that girl along.

She was only a bit of a thing, but she must be packing a lot of nerve to come

into this country after her sister. There was no chance to talk, for we were

going single file, and I wasn’t stopping. This was a strange trail, and we’d no

idea where it might lead. Mayhap right into a bunch of Apaches — in which case

some brave might have my scalp in his wickiup, if he bothered to take it. The

Apaches were very strong on scalping.

At the top of a long slope we paused for a breather, and I looked around at

Dorset. She was right behind me, leading her pony, and taking two steps to my

one. Harry Brook, up there on the horse, had not said a word.

We stood there for a mite, and she said, “The sky’s turning.”

There was gray in it, all right, and day would come quickly now. We stood quiet

then, saying nothing nor needing to, but there was communication in the night,

we felt each other, felt the darkness and the danger around us, and felt the

cool dampness of the canyon ,after the rain. We could smell the pines … and we

smelled something else.

We smelled smoke.

It was enough to curl your hair. In this layout we couldn’t expect friends. My

partners had lit out to the north, I was sure, and if there was anybody here it

had to be Apaches. And that smoke was right ahead of us.

We daren’t go back, and we couldn’t climb out. Me, I slipped the Winchester out

of its scabbard, and so did she.

“Well go ahead quiet,” I whispered, “and if we can get by ’em, we will.

Otherwise, we got to mount up and run for it. You and the boy get on the same

horse, and if trouble shows, run.”

“What about you?”

Me, I smiled. “Lady, you’re not looking at no hero. I’ll get off a few shots and

I’ll be dusting the trail right behind you, so don’t slow up or I’ll run right

up your shirt tail.”

We started on. Dawn was streaking the sky when we saw the canyon was starting to

widen out. Then I saw moccasin tracks, some shreds of bark, and a few sticks —

somebody collecting firewood. And then we heard yelling ahead of us, and I knew

that kind of yelling.

“Might be,” I said, “we can get by. They’re mighty concerned, right now.”

She looked at me. She said, “What concerns an Apache so much that we might slip

by his camp?”

A man couldn’t look into those honest gray eyes and lie. She would guess,

anyway. “They got them a prisoner,” I said, “and they’re tryin’ to find out how

much of a man they caught. If he stands up to torture and dies well, they will

figure they’re big men, because they caught a big man.”

We moved ahead, each of us warning our horse against noise, and those horses

could be warned, they were that smart. Aside from their own instincts, they had

caught some of our wariness for danger, for a horse, like a dog, can become

extremely sensitive to the moods of his rider.

The western man trusted to his horse’s ears, its eyes, its senses. He shared

with it his water, and if need be, his food.

We moved forward quietly but steadily, and soon we saw their camp on a bench

near the stream, partly hidden by brush and trees. The stream was not over four

feet wide and no more than four or five inches deep, and the canyon through

which we had come evidently caught the overflow.

Rifle ready, I led the way, watching the camp from the corner of my eye.

Here the dry stream-bed was perhaps fifty feet wide, most of it white sand

dotted with rocks, many of them half buried. The brush was mostly willow, and

thick.

It was a cool morning but I could feel sweat trickling down my back between my

shoulder blades, and I worried for fear a hoof would strike stone. We went

steadily on, drawing close to the camp, then abreast of it.

The Indians were almighty concerned with their prisoner, and they were shooting

at him with arrows, missing in as close as they could, pinning the sides of his

shirt to the tree, parting his hair with arrows. There was a trickle of blood

down his forehead which I glimpsed when he lifted his head, and for the first

time above their yells I heard his voice, and he was singing.

It was Spanish Murphy.

Yes, sir. Spanish was tied to a cottonwood in the clearing and the Apaches were

shooting arrows at him and working themselves up to more serious ways of hurting

… and he was singing!

Oh, they hated him for it, but they loved him for it, too, if I knew Indians.

For their prisoner was a man with nerve, singing his defiance right into their

faces … and it was also a means of keeping up his courage.

They would kill him, all right. They were devils when it came to inflicting

pain, and they would try to make him last as long as possible, devising new

tricks to give him the tortures of hell, and loving him for his strength and his

guts.

Spanish was a singing man who loved the sound of the old songs, the western

songs, the songs from the high-up hills. He was singing “Zebra Dun” when we

caught sight of him and, raising his head, he looked right through an open space

in the brush, looked right at us, and he changed his tune to “John Hardy.”

“John Hardy was a desperate man, he carried his two guns every day. He killed a

man on the West Virginny line, but you ought to see Tell Sackett gettin’ away, I

want to see Tell Sackett gettin’ away!”

There he was, a-warning me. Him in all that trouble, but thinking most of us

getting out of there. And me, I daren’t stop, for I had a girl and a small boy

depending on me. But this I did see. There weren’t more than inine or ten

Indians there, so far as I could see, they were all warriors.

We went on, our skins crawling with fear for Spanish Murphy, and also with fear

for ourselves. We were beyond their camp now, but were expecting any moment to

hear a yell behind us and to see the Apaches come streaming after us.

The thing that played into our hand was that the Indians probably had no idea

there was anybody else about. They had either killed the others, or they’d taken

out running.

Fifty yards beyond their camp the canyon took a bend, and when we had it behind

us we felt some better. I decided we didn’t have much time before those ‘Paches

got down to serious business with Spanish. I knew I had to get him out of there,

and I had to do it before he was hurt too bad to travel.

When we had gone a little way I pulled up. “You’ll have to go on alone from

here,” I said to Dorset Binny. “Do you know Sonora?”

“No.”

“The Apaches have run most of the folks off their ranches north of here, and the

few who are still there won’t fight back. I’d say ride due west and watch for a

trail. If you can find a ranch, ask them to take you in and hide you.”

She lingered, and I said, “Whatever made you try this, anyway?”

“There was nobody else to come. I didn’t want my sister growing up an Apache.”

She hesitated. “Not that what we had was so much better. Since Pa died I’ve been

trying to ranch, but we haven’t done very well.”

“You ride west,” I repeated. “I don’t need to tell you to be careful. You didn’t

get this far riding it blind.” I swung my horse, lifting a finger to my hatbrim.

” ‘Bye, Dorset.”

“Good-bye, William Tell,” she said, and they rode away up the canyon and I

turned back.

I had no idea in my mind at all about what I was going to do. How does a body go

about taking a prisoner away from blood-hungry Apaches? I couldn’t just open

fire. In the first place, they’d scatter out, pin me down, and surround me in no

time. Also, they might just up and kill Spanish right off.

All the time there was a-nagging at me a thing I knew about Indians. Ninety-nine

times out of a hundred a man who rides into an Indian camp is safe as long as he

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