The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard Part 21
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John Benedict followed him. "Wait a minute," he called, but stopped when he got to the middle of the street.
On the saloon steps he could see Sid Roman plainly in the square of light under the doors, lying on his back with his eyes closed. A moan came from his lips, but it was almost inaudible. No sound came from within the saloon.
He mounted the first step and stood there. "Tio!"
No answer came. He went all the way up on the porch and looked down at Roman. "Tio! I'm taking this man away!"
Without hesitating he grabbed the wounded man beneath the arms and pulled him out of the doorway to the darkened end of the ramada past the windows. Roman screamed as his legs dragged across the boards. Jimmy Robles moved back to the door and the quietness settled again.
He pushed the door in, hard, and let it swing back, catching it as it reached him. Tio was leaning against the bar with bottles and gla.s.ses strung out its smooth length behind him. From the porch he could see no one else. Tio looked like a frightened animal cowering in a dead-end ravine, more pathetic in his ragged and dirty cotton clothes. His rope-soled shoes edged a step toward the doorway, with his body moving in a crouch. The pistol was in front of him, his left hand under the other wrist supporting the weight of the heavy Colt and, the deputy noticed now, trying to keep it steady.
Tio waved the barrel at him. "Come in and join your friends, Jaime." His voice quivered to make the bravado meaningless.
247 247 Robles moved inside the door of the long barroom and saw Remillard and Judge Essery standing by the table nearest the bar. Two other men stood at the next table. One of them was the bartender, wiping his hands back and forth over his ap.r.o.n.
Robles spoke calmly. "You've done enough, Tio. Hand me the gun."
"Enough?" Tio swung the pistol back to the first table. "I have just started."
"Don't talk crazy. Hand me the gun."
"Do you think I am crazy?"
"Just hand me the gun."
Tio smiled, and by it seemed to calm. "My foolish nephew. Use your head for one minute. What do you suppose would happen to me if I handed you this gun?"
"The law would take its course," Jimmy Robles said. The words sounded meaningless even to him.
"It would take its course to the nearest cottonwood," Tio said. "There are enough fools in the family with you, Jaime." He smiled still, though his voice continued to shake.
"Perhaps this is my mission, Jaime. The reason I was born."
"You make it hard to decide just which one is the fool."
"No. Hear me. G.o.d made Tio Robles to his image and likeness that he might someday blow out the brains of Senores Rema-yard and Essery." Tio's laugh echoed in the long room.
Jimmy Robles looked at the two men. Judge Essery was holding on to the table and his thin face was white with fear, glistening with fear. And for all old man Remillard's authority, he couldn't do a thing. An old Mexican, like a thousand he could buy or sell, could stand there and do whatever he desired because he had slipped past the cowman's zone of influence, past fearing for the future.
Tio raised the pistol to the level of his eyes. It was already c.o.c.ked. "Watch my mission, Jaime. Watch me send two devils to h.e.l.l!"
He watched fascinated. Two men were going to die. Two men he hardly knew, but he could feel only hate for them. Not like he might hate a man, but with the anger he felt for a principle that went against his reason. Something big, like injustice. It went through his mind that if these two men died, all injustice would vanish. He heard the word in his mind. His own voice saying it. Injustice. Repeating it, until then he heard only a part of the word.
His gun came out and he pulled the trigger in the motion. Nothing was repeating in his mind, now. He looked down at Tio Robles on the floor and knew he was dead before he knelt over him.
He picked up Tio in his arms like a small child and walked out of the Supreme into the evening dusk. John Benedict approached him and he saw people crowding out into the street. He walked past the sheriff and behind him heard Remillard's booming voice. "That was a close one!" and a scattering of laughter. Fainter then, he heard Remillard again. "Your boy learns fast."
He walked toward Spanishtown, not seeing the faces that lined the street, hardly feeling the limp weight in his arms.
The people, the storefronts, the street-all was hazy-as if his thoughts covered his eyes like a blindfold. And as he went on in the darkness he thought he understood now what John Benedict meant by justice.
15.
The Last Shot.
Original t.i.tle: A Matter of Duty Fifteen Western Tales, Fifteen Western Tales, September 1953 September 1953 FROM THE SHADE of the pines, looking across the draw, he watched the single file of cavalrymen come out of the timber onto the open bench. The first rider raised his arm and they moved at a slower pace down the slope, through the green-tinged brush. The sun made small flashes on the visors of their kepis and a clinking sound drifted faintly across the draw.
He had come down the same way a few minutes before and now he was certain that they would stay on his trail. Watching them, he sat his sorrel mare unmoving, his young face sun-darkened and clean-lined and glistening with perspiration, though the air was cool. A Sharps lay across his lap and he gripped it hard, then looked about quickly as if searching for a place to hide it. Instead he swung the stock against the sorrel's rump and guided her away from the rim, breaking into a run as they crossed a meadow of bear gra.s.s toward the darkness of a pine stand. And as he drew near, a rider, watching him closely, came out of the pines.
Lou Walker, the young man, swung his mount close to the other rider and pushed the rifle toward him.
"Give me your carbine, Risdon!"
"What happened?" the man said. Ed Risdon was close to fifty. He sat heavily in his saddle and his round, leathery face studied Walker calmly.
"I missed him."
"How could you miss? All you had to do was aim at his beard."
"His horse spooked as I fired. It reared up and I hit it in the withers."
"They see you?"
"I was up in the rocks and when I missed they took out after me. Give me the carbine. If I get caught they'll see it hasn't been fired."
"What if I get caught?" Risdon said.
"You won't if you scat."
Risdon drew the short rifle from its saddle scabbard and handed it to Lou Walker, exchanging it for Walker's Sharps. "Maybe," he said, "I'd better stay with you."
"Get home and tell Beckwith what happened-and get that gun out of here."
Risdon hesitated. "What'll I tell Barbara?"
Walker stared at him. "I don't like it any more than you do."
"I think maybe it's getting senseless," Risdon answered.
"Think what you want-just get the h.e.l.l out of here."
Walker nudged the mare with his knee and rode away from Risdon, back toward the rim. As he neared it he looked around, across the meadow, to make certain Risdon was gone. He could hear the cavalrymen below him now, the clinking sound of their approach sharp in the crisp air, and waited until they could see him up through the trees before he started off, following the rim. There was a shout, then another, and when the carbine shot rang behind him he knew they had reached the crest. He swung from the high ground then, zigzagging down through the scattered pinons, guiding the reins loosely.
A quarter of the way from the bottom the dwarf pines gave up to brush and hard rock. Walker spurred toward the open slope, glancing over his shoulder, seeing the flashes of blue uniforms up through the trees. He heard the carbine report and the whine as the bullet glanced off rock. Then another. A third kicked up sand a few yards in front of the mare and she swerved suddenly on the slope. He tried to hold her in, but the mare was already side-slipping on the loose shale. Suddenly she was falling and Walker went out of the saddle. He tried to twist his body in the air-then he struck the slope and rolled. . . .
THERE WAS A stable smell of leather and damp horsehide. Again his body slammed against the ground and the shock of it brought open his 251 251 eyes. They had carried him draped across a saddle and when they reached the others, a trooper threw his legs over the horse and he landed on his back.
He heard a voice say, "Sergeant!" close over him. He looked up and the trooper spat to the side. "He's awake."
Now there were other faces that looked down at him and they were all the same-shapeless kepis, tired, curious eyes, dirt in crease lines, and two- or three-day beards. Though there were some faces without the stubble, they were boys with the expressions of men. The blue uniforms were covered with fine dust and the jackets seemed ill-fitting, with b.u.t.tons missing, and from the shoulders hung the oblong, leather-covered, wooden cases that hold seven cartridge tubes for a Spencer carbine.
And then another uniform was standing over him. Alkali dust made the Union blue seem faded, but the jacket held firmly to chest and shoulders and a full, red beard reached to the second b.u.t.ton. The red beard moved.
"Mister, we owe you an apology, though I don't imagine it makes your head feel any better."
Walker relaxed slowly, sitting up, then came to his feet and stood in front of the red beard which was even with his own chin. But his leg buckled under him and he sat down again, feeling the stabbing in his right knee. He winced, but kept his eyes on the officer. He had imagined McGrail to be a much taller man and now he was surprised. Stories make a man taller than he is. Stories make a man taller than he is. . . . Then he felt better because Major Mc-Grail was not unusually tall. Still, he was uneasy. Perhaps because he had tried to kill him not a half hour before. . . . Then he felt better because Major Mc-Grail was not unusually tall. Still, he was uneasy. Perhaps because he had tried to kill him not a half hour before.
"Your knee?" McGrail said.
Walker nodded, then said, "Where's my horse?"
"It was past saving."
"You didn't have a right to fire on me."
McGrail smiled faintly. "I'm told you had a d.a.m.n uncommon guilty way of running when ordered to halt."
"I didn't hear anything."
"Perhaps you weren't listening."
"I don't wear a uniform."
"Did you ever?"
"Are you holding a trial?"
"Someone shooting at me arouses a fair amount of curiosity."
"So your men chased out and spotted me and thought I was the one."
McGrail said nothing. He extended his left hand to the side and the sergeant stepped quickly, placing in it the carbine he'd been holding.
McGrail handed the carbine to Walker. "We took the liberty of examining it," he said. "You see, the bullet struck my mount. From something with a large bore-a Sharps perhaps."
And mine's a carbine that hasn't been fired."
"A Perry that hasn't been fired," McGrail corrected. "A Confederate make, isn't it?" "As far as I know, this gun doesn't know north from south." "I suppose not." McGrail smiled. "Which way are you going?" he said then.
"Valverde."
"Well, I can repay some inconvenience by offering you a remount home."
"I didn't say it was my home."
"In fact-" McGrail smiled "-you haven't said anything."
THE UNION CAVALRY Station, Valverde, New Mexico, was a mile north of the pueblo. McGrail swung his troop in that direction as they approached Valverde and Lou Walker sat his mount for some time watching the dust rise behind the line of cavalry. Then he went on- though the image of McGrail, red beard and tired eyes, remained in his mind.
Before reaching the plaza, he turned into a side street and tied the borrowed mount in front of a one-story adobe and went through the doorway that said eat above it in large faded letters.
The man behind the bar looked up and nodded as he entered and the waiter, who was Mexican and wore a stained ap.r.o.n, also nodded. There were no patrons in the room, but Walker pa.s.sed through it to a 253 253 back room which was smaller and had only three tables. And as he sat down, the Mexican appeared in the doorway.
"You're limping."
"My horse threw me."
"That's a bad thing." The waiter considered this and then said, "What pleases you?"
"Brandy and coffee."
His knee was becoming stiff and was sensitive when he touched it. He rubbed it idly, becoming used to it, until the waiter returned and placed his tray on the table. The waiter poured coffee from a small porcelain pot, then raised the brandy bottle.
"In the coffee?"
He shook his head and watched as the waiter poured brandy into a gla.s.s. He looked up as a man came through the doorway.
Walker nodded and said, "Beckwith."
The man, in his mid-forties, was thin and he wore a heavy mustache that made his drawn face seem even narrower.
He said, "What's that?"
"Brandy."
"You better watch it." Sitting down, Beckwith's hand flicked against the waiter's arm. "We'll see you," he said and waited until the scuffing sound of the waiter's sandals had faded out of the room while he watched Walker closely.
"I saw McGrail ten minutes ago."
"I missed him."
"That's like telling me I've got eyes. All you had to do was aim at his beard."
"That's what Risdon said."
"Where is he?"
"He went back to del Norte."
"He was supposed to stay with you," Beckwith said.
"He went back to tell you what happened. I didn't know you were here."
The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard Part 21
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