Treasure Mountain by Louis L’Amour

no sign of pa, so they’d followed, found Pierre’s grave, and knew pa was alive.

Pa might return to New Orleans and tell Philip what happened in the mountains.

Or he might come back and get more gold. It must have been obvious from the

tracks that pa’s horses were carrying heavy. What they carried had to be gold.

Pa knew this country, and he knew old Powder-Face. He knew he could stay with

him until he was rested and strong again, and he could hide the gold close by

and Powder-Face would not disturb it. So he had come west, and he had been

followed.

Lying there looking up at the clouds, I considered. I’d take my appaloosa, I’d

take that buckskin pack-horse, and enough grub for two weeks, and I’d plan to

stay in the mountains until I found what I was hunting or ran out of grub.

It began to spatter rain so I tugged my tarp over my head and just let her

spatter. It was a good sound, that rain. Tyrel would be coming along from New

Mexico soon and he would be bringing ma. They would bring cattle and take up

land at the foot of the mountains somewhere. We were mountain folk, and we

cottoned to the high-up hills.

There’d be Tyrel and me, Flagan and Galloway, and maybe Orrin would hang out his

shingle down in Animas City or even in Shalako, although there was mighty little

for a lawyer to do there. But just give folks time. You can’t get two people

together without soon or late they’re lawin’ at each other.

Far up there on the cold, gray rocks of the peaks where the last streaks of snow

were melting off, up there would be strong, fierce winds blowing, weeping over

the high plateaus, trimming the spruce to one level, driving the freezing rain

into every crevice in the rock.

How could I find anything up there? If pa had died, what would be left of him

now? Some scattered bones, his boot heels, maybe, and part of his holster and

belt, chewed by wolves or other varmints.

It would be a lonely place to die, but maybe such a place as he’d want, for he

was no stay-a-bed man. He’d always been up and doing, and when it came to that,

what better way to go than on the trail somewhere, packing a gun and riding the

high country?

The spattering rain made me think of Powder-Face. I raised up my head to look,

but the old one was gone, vanished into the night and the rain as if he had

never been.

For a moment he held in my thoughts, and I wondered how many times he or his

kind had sat staring into the flames and feeling the rain fall and the wind

blow?

Man had enemies, that was in the nature of things, but when it comes right down

to it his battle to live is with that world out there, the cold, the rain, the

wind, the heat, the drought, and the sun-parched pools where water had been.

Hunger, thirst, and cold—man’s first enemies, and no doubt his last.

CHAPTER XXI

That appaloosa and me had reached a kind of understanding. On a chilly morning

he liked to buck the frost out of his system, so whenever I put a foot in the

stirrup around daybreak I knew he was going to unwind.

Naturally, I wasted no time getting into the saddle. If I put a foot in the

stirrup and swung my leg over real fast, me and the saddle would come together

on the rise.

Of course, I always managed to mount a little away from camp so’s I wouldn’t

buck right through breakfast. That’s the sort of thing can make a man right

unpopular in any kind of outfit.

This morning that appaloosa really unwound. He was feelin’ good and it done me

no harm to just sit up there and let him have at it. Ridin’ easy in the saddle

all the time can make a man downright lazy, so when they feel like buckin’, I

say let ’em buck. I don’t care which nor whether. When Ap had bucked himself

into good nature and an appetite, I took him back to the fire and lit down from

the saddle.

Judas had put together some grub and like always when he done the cookin’ it

tasted mighty fine. He was spoilin’ me for my own cookin’, and soon I’d be out

yonder on the trail with nobody but myself to cook.

I told them all about the visit from Powder-Face and about my plan.

“You sure you don’t want me to ride along?” Orrin asked.

“I would prefer to ride with you, suh,” Judas said. “It might be that I could be

of service.”

The Tinker said nothing. He was ready to go if I wanted him, and well he knew it

and I knew it.

“It would be pleasurable,” I said. “I could do with the comp’ny and the cookin’,

but a man listens better when he’s alone, and he hears better.”

When we’d finished breakfast, and I’d lingered as long as I could afford over my

coffee, I went to my horses. “You ride loose, Tell,” Orrin advised. “This isn’t

any western outfit. They’re a murderin’ lot.”

I stepped into the saddle. Ap had finished with bucking during our little set-to

of the morning, and he made no fuss. Besides, he knew I was now in no mood for

catywampusing around.

“The way I’m riding is round about,” I said, “but I want to come into the

mountains the way pa did. If I see the country the way he saw it maybe I can

catch his frame of mind.

“By the time he started up that trail, June must have been pretty well gone, and

we know the snow was light that year and had mostly gone off. He wouldn’t find

much snow except where the shadows gathered and in deep hollows. The trail

Powder-Face speaks of might be the one he took.”

“I was talking to one of the young braves,” said Orrin. “Some call it the Ghost

Trail. They say it was made by The People. Who Went Before …”

“Well,” I gathered the reins, “you know me, Orrin. I’m going to ride easy into

the hills and sort of let it come to me.”

When I rode down what you could call the street of Shalako, Nell was standing

out before a new-built house. I drew up and took off my hat. “Howdy, ma’am,” I

said, “I’m off for a ride.”

She looked at me, serious-like and tender. It kind of worried me, that look did,

but then I figured it was just that we’d known each other awhile, not that she

was thinking gentle thoughts of me. I’d gotten used to womenfolks speaking to me

and passin’ by toward handsome gents who had some flash and flare to ’em. Not

that I blamed ’em any. I’m just a big ol’ homely man who’s kind of handy with

horses, guns, and cattle, which doesn’t fit me very much for cuttin’ didoes with

the female sex.

“Now you be careful, Tell Sackett!” she said. “I wish you’d not go.”

“Somewhere my pa lies dead, unburied, perhaps, and ma’s growing on in her years

and it frets her to think of it. I’m going to ride yonder and try to find what

remains of him so ma can go her way in comfort.”

Her eyes were big and serious. “It is a fine thing,” she said, “but it will do

your ma no good to have your own bones unburied on some fool mountain! I wish I

could talk to your ma! I’d speak to her! I’d tell her what she’s doing!”

“It was not her idea that we ride out and look,” I said. “It was ours. But it is

a small thing we can do to comfort her.”

She put her hand up to me and touched me gentle on the sleeves. “Tell? Do ride

careful, now, and when you’re back, will you come calling?”

“I will,” I said. “I’ll ride by and halloo the house.”

“You’ll get down and come in!” she flared.

“Dast I? Seems to me I recall ol’ Jack Ben was some hand with the rock salt when

the boys come a-courtin’ around.”

She flushed. “He never shot at you, did he? You don’t look like you caught much

salt, the way you set that saddle! If pa’d shot you, you’d still be ridin’ high

in your stirrups!”

“I never came around,” I said simply. “I didn’t reckon there was much point in

it.” I blushed my ownself. “I never was much hand to court, Nell Trelawney, I

never quite got the feel of it. Now if it was somethin’ I could catch with a

rope, I’d—”

“Oh, go along with you!” She stepped back, looking up at me, disgusted maybe. I

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