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The Lonely Men by Louis L’Amour

… I mean, you and your sister-in-law … ”

I looked right at him. “I’ll take no offense, Spanish—you’ve stood by me. I

never saw her before we met in Tucson. I haven’t seen my brother in some time

… never did talk to him about his affairs. Little time we had together we

mostly talked about the old days and what become of folks we knew.” I looked

around at them. “I ain’t been home much. I’ve been drifting.”

Nobody said anything for a while, and then Battles, who had come out of the

brush, said, “I figure you’ve been lied to, Sackett.”

“It don’t make sense.”

“Any reason she’d want you dead? You got to realize … not many come back from

here. We ain’t even sure we’re gettin’ back.”

“The children never heard of any other boy,” Rocca repeated, “and they’d know.

And, Harry Brook would. He speaks the language pretty good, and there’s talk

around the Indian villages.”

Well, there was no use studying on it now. We had miles to travel. I said as

much and we saddled up and moved down the creek.

Rocca rode with his head over his shoulder. I mean he was a worried man. When

you see Apaches you’re worried, but when you don’t see them you’re maybe really

in trouble. They could be all around you.

When the shadows were beginning to reach out from the hills we came up to a

ranch, four tired men with some tired children. As we neared it we spread out

and I rode with my Winchester up in my hands, my eyes moving under the low brim

of my hat, searching each shadow, each doubtful place.

No smoke … no movement. Somewhere a blue jay fussed, somewhere a quail called

into the stillness and another made reply. Otherwise it was still.

Nobody spoke, and we rode into the yard. Battles rode through the gate, and I

went through a gap in the ruined wall. Spanish circled to the right, Rocca to

the left.

The ranch was deserted … a ruin. Fire had gutted it, and some of the stone

walls had toppled. The windows gapped like great, hollow eyes that stared upon

nothing. The barns were a tumbled mass of burned timbers and the fallen stones

of foundation walls. Mesquite trees choked up the corrals.

But trees still shaded the ranch yard. Water ran from an iron pipe into a tank.

An oak limb had grown through an open window. In the patio the blocks of stone

that paved it had been thrust up by a growing sycamore, which was now several

niches through.

Once this ranch had been a splendid place, once the fields had been green and

men had worked here, lived here, and loved here.

We rode into the thick grass where the ranch yard had been and we drew up. We

heard only the wind … only the trickle of water into the tank. John J. Battles

looked slowly around and said nothing, and Spanish Murphy sat silent for a long

moment. Then he said, “This is the sort of place you dream about, when you’re on

a long, dusty trail, or you’re in the desert and short of water.”

“We’d better have a look around,” I said. “Tamp, you scout to the wall yonder.

Spanish can stay with the children.”

We moved out. A rabbit sprang from under my feet and went bounding away. We

searched the place, but we found nothing, nothing at all.

There was a watch tower on one corner of the place, shrewdly built to observe

the country around, but now partly masked by the tops of trees. While I took the

first watch, Battles put some grub together for a meal.

The sun was warm and pleasant, but it bothered me for I could see too little in

the open country to the west. Our enemies should come from the east, but trust

an Apache to use the sun’s glare if he figured on an attack. But the sun sank

behind the mountains to to westward and I studied the country all around with

great care, and saw nothing.

Where were Dorset Binny and the boy? If they had ridden the way we planned they

should be not too far away, for our course had veered around and we, too, had

come west.

From the watch tower I could study the terrain and my eyes searched out all

possible hiding places. The position of the ranch had been well chosen. The

place had a good field of fire in every direction and must have been easy to

defend back in the old days, yet the Indians had taken it, burned it out, and

more than likely killed everybody on the ranch.

It seemed to me at least fifteen to twenty men would have been needed to defend

the ranch. Maybe they were shorthanded when the attack came.

In the last minutes of daylight, I saw them coming — two riders, not over half a

mile off.

I called softly to Murphy, who was closest and knelt by one of the openings left

in the wall for a firing position. But I was sure right from the start. As they

drew nearer I could see them clear enough.

Standing up on the tower I called out, “Dorset! Dorset Binny! Come on in!”

Chapter 10

Laura Pritts Sackett was immaculate. She was cool, aloof, yet she managed to

convey the idea that beneath that still surface there was turmoil, waiting to be

exploited. A cold, emotionless young woman, she had learned very early that the

appearance of deep emotion and passion beneath the quiet exterior was a tool and

a weapon to be used, and so she had used it

Her adoration for her father had resulted in hatred for all who in any way

thwarted or opposed him.

As the days passed into weeks and she heard nothing from Mexico, she grew

worried. Suppose, after all, Tell Sackett was not killed by the Apaches? Suppose

he did return, and her falsehood was exposed? She was less worried, however,

about being exposed — she had no intention of remaining in Tucson anyway — than

about Sackett not being killed.

She knew enough about the Sacketts to know they had a way of getting out of

corners. Suddenly, she made up her mind.

She would leave Tucson. She would go back east without waiting any longer. She

might never hear what happened in Sonora, and there was no sense in staying on

here, in this heat, and merely waiting. Her father had a little property in the

East, and it was time she returned to settle the estate. But first she would

make one final effort

She was seated in the Shoo-Fly when she reached that decision. She knew, as did

everyone, about the gun battle in the Quartz Rock Saloon, and she had seen the

Hadden boys around town. She knew also that the Maddens had been doing some

talking about what would happen when they met Tell Sackett and Tampico Rocca

again.

Suddenly the door opened and Captain Lewiston came in, accompanied by Lieutenant

Jack Davis, whom she remembered from the stage ride to Tucson.

They came to her table. “Mrs. Sackett,” Davis said, “I want to present Captain

Lewiston.”

She turned her wide blue eyes on the Captain and sensed a coolness, a reserve.

This one would not be so easy as Davis to wind around her finger. “How do you

do, Captain,” she said. “Won’t you sit down?”

The men seated themselves and ordered coffee. “I hope you will forgive the

intrusion, Mrs. Sackett,” Captain Lewiston said, “but we were wondering if you

could tell us anything about the present location of Tell Sackett. I believe he

is a relative of yours.”

“He is my brother-in-law,” she said, “although I had never met him until a few

weeks ago. Right here in this room, in fact. He was with some other men. I don’t

know where they went. Is he in trouble?”

Lewiston hesitated. “Yes and no,” he said finally. “If he rode into Apache

country, as we have heard that he did, he may be in very serious trouble

indeed.”

She allowed her lip to tremble. “He … he hasn’t been killed, has he? The

Sacketts are reckless, daring men, and …” She let her words trail away.

“We have heard nothing,” Lewiston said. “We are planning a strike against the

Apaches that will take us deep into Mexico. We would not want them stirred up by

some unauthorized foray into their country.”

“I … I did not know. If anything should happen to Mr. Sackett my husband would

be very upset. They are very close.”

“Mrs. Sackett, I understand you provided Mr. Sackett with a horse? Is that

true?”

“Of course. His own had been killed and he was unable to purchase one. I merely

helped.” She smiled. “What else could I do?”

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