The Lonely Men by Louis L’Amour

steps higher, then stopped, and we let her be. It was still a far piece to the

top.

After we’d all caught our breath we started on, and it was a struggle. But

little by little we scrambled up until at last we got on top. By that time it

was full dark and we still had the other horse to bring up.

Battles was down there alone, or as good as. Rocca was in no shape to lend a

hand, and might be asleep. The Apaches didn’t attack at night as a rule, for

they had the notion that if a man was killed in the darkness his soul would

wander forever in darkness. But if they did try coming up that slope in the

dark, Battles could never hold them.

Leaving Dorset with the mare and the youngsters, Spanish and me made our way

back into the basin. By the time we reached the bottom we were so almighty tired

we were staggering, and we just naturally caved in. John J. reported no movement

as far as he knew of. Rocca was sleeping. He had lost a lot of blood, and we had

no way of treating a wound. Up on the mesa we might find one of the herbs the

Indians used, but down here there was nothing.

Spanish worked a hollow for his hip in the sand and went to sleep. After I took

John J.’s place, he did the same.

It was still, and overhead the stars were bright as they can only be in a desert

sky. A coolness came up from the barranca below, and I listened for any whisper

of sound, struggling against my own weariness and the need for sleep. But a few

minutes of sleep might mean death for all of us. Only my wariness stood guard,

and the thought of them trusting me.

A long while later, Spanish came to me. “You better get a little sleep,” he

said, “but if we’re figuring on getting that horse up the mountain, it won’t be

much.”

There was no need for me to move. I just let go and closed my eyes, and when I

woke up it was with a hand on my shoulder.

“They’re stirrin’ around down there,” Spanish said, “and it’s gettin’ on toward

dawn.”

“You two hold ’em,” I said, getting up. “I’ll take that other horse up the

mountain.”

“Alone? It can’t be done.”

“It’s got to be,” I said. “The Apaches will figure it out if we wait. Maybe they

already have.”

John J. was on his feet, his gun belted on and his Winchester in his hand, a

spare cartridge belt draped over his shoulder.

“If it gets bad, pull back to Rocca here, and make a stand,” I said. “I’ll get

back as soon as I can.”

He indicated the horses. “Do you think we could make a break for it? Down the

slope and right into them, shooting all the while?”

It was a thought, and I said so, but I told him no, not yet. Then I went and

caught up the other mustang and headed for the slope. Oddly enough, Dorset’s

horse took to it as if it was home country. More than likely she could smell the

other horse, and knew it had gone this way. Maybe she could also smell Dorset.

Wild horses can follow a trail as good as any wolf — I’ve seen them do it many a

time. And the other horse, with us working to help, had maybe made the trail a

little better.

The horse had to struggle, and I tugged and braced myself and pulled, and that

game little horse stayed right with it. With daybreak tinting the sky, we made

it to the rim.

And then we heard the shots. Somebody down there was using a Winchester.

We heard the chatter of the rifle, then a few slower, paced shots. There was

silence, then another shot.

The children were wide-eyed and scared, but they were pioneer youngsters, and no

telling the trouble they’d seen before this. Dorset stepped into the saddle and

I taken her hand.

“Ride,” I said, “and stay with it. Hide out by day, ride by night,” I told her

again. “Don’t shoot unless they get close, and then shoot to kill. I figure

you’re going to make it. We can hold them a day or two.”

She put her hand on mine. “Tell, thank them for me, will you? All of them?”

“Sure.”

The shooting down there was steady now. They needed me down there. I knew how

Apaches could come up a slope. Nothing to shoot at but a few bobbing, flashing

figures, you scarce saw them when they vanished, appeared again elsewhere, and

came on.

Dorset knew it, too. She turned her horse, lifted a hand, and they rode off into

the coming morning. I taken one look and then I hit the slope a-sliding. Far

below I could see the Indians.

Battles was on the rim, bellied down behind rock slabs. Far off, near the

stream, I could see the Apache ponies, but nothing was moving on the slope.

Behind Battles I could see Spanish, and he was rolling some rocks into place,

lifting others, making a sort of rough wall from where John J. was firing to

where Rocca was lying. He was getting set for a last-ditch fight, and the lay of

the land sort of favored our position by being a mite lower than the rest of the

hollow.

Of a sudden an Apache came up from behind a rock and started to move forward,

and my Winchester came up as if it moved of its own will, and I taken a quick

sight and let go.

High on the slope the way I was, right under the rim, I had a good view of what

lay below. That Apache was a good three hundred yards off and lower down, but I

held low a-purpose and that bullet caught him full in the chest.

He stopped in his tracks and Battles shot into him, getting off two fast shots

before he could drop, but when he did drop he just rolled over and lay sprawled

out, face up to the sun.

A number of shots were fired at me, but all of them hit the slope a good fifty

feet below me, and I decided right then I was going to stay where I was.

It stayed quiet then, and slowly the afternoon drew on. Our horses had been

bunched by Spanish so that they were close to Rocca, and the position seemed

pretty good unless the Apaches decided to attack by night. But I kept on

thinking about what we might do. There had to be a way out.

Now, my pappy was always one for figuring things. He told me time and again that

when in a difficulty a body should always take time to contemplate. “The only

way folks got to where they are,” he’d say, “was by thinkin’ things out. No man

ever had the claws of a grizzly nor the speed of a deer — what he had was a

brain.”

Right now we had here a stalemate, but it worked in favor of the Apache. It

worked for him because he had access to plenty of water and grass, which we did

not have.

And I knew the Apache would no longer wait. He’d be scaling that rimrock

himself, and without horses he could get up there all right, although it would

take some doing. We could figure on having them above us by the next daybreak,

and then that hollow would be nothing but a place to die in.

We had to make it out of there, and right now. Nobody expects to live forever,

but nobody wishes to shorten his time. Of course, a body never knows which turn

will shorten it. Like when a bunch of us boys went off to the war we left a

friend behind who paid a substitute. We all came back, safe and sound, but the

one who stayed home was dead — thrown from a horse he’d ridden for three years

… scared by a rabbit, it jumped, and he lit on his head. So a man never knows.

Only if we didn’t get out of this place we weren’t going to be laying many

plans.

Up there where I was, I began to give study to the country around.

I knew that getting the rest of those horses up to the top was an unlikely

chance. In the first place, most of them were larger and heavier, and altogether

harder to handle than the two we had got out. We might just possibly get one

horse up, or even two. We would never make three or four.

So I cut that out of my thinking. Somehow we had to get out by going downhill,

and that meant riding right through that bunch of Apaches …

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