Authors: Ralph Cotton
The Bluebird looked confused by Prew's actions. He dropped his knife, let his blanket fall to the ground.
“Don't shoot,” he said, stiffly. He pointed out at the rocky edge where Foz had fallen. “Brother Foz, no drink all the mescal.”
Prew paused, stunned.
“What? He didn't . . . ?” His gun barrel slumped an inch. “Heâhe said he did. . . .”
The Bluebird shook his head.
“No, he did not drink it,” he said. “I see the Golden Riders drink it. Say they go to jakeâthey go around cantina, drink mescal.”
“Then”âPrew paused againâ“then why did Foz say he drank it?” he asked.
“I don't know,” said the Bluebird. “Mescal make him crazy, I think.”
Prew shook his lowered head, then looked back up at the Bluebird.
“And why are you talking so much?” he asked. “All of a sudden you understand English?”
The Bluebird shut his lips clamlike and stared at Prew, seeing the big Colt move away from him and fall back to Prew's side.
“I shut up now,” he said.
The Bluebird was still up as the first rays of sunlight mantled the eastern hill line. The sound of Prew's gunshot had sparked his hearing for a while the way loud noises sometimes did. It was waning now, but while it lasted, it had been glorious. His hearing, coupled with the powerful effects of the loaded mescal, had brought his spirit to a level seldom found. He'd spent the night listening to any sounds, intricate or inaneâsounds of night and of life on these dry desert badlands. He was there, a part of those things and their sounds once again, if only briefly.
He'd heard the sound of coyotes, of a lone and distant wolf. He'd heard the wings of flying creatures batting and dipping, stirring and muddling the veil of night's darkness without leaving their print. Their sounds had spun inside him a siren's message of willfulness and need, sounds of the spinal mindless procurement of life here in this arid wilderness whereupon every struggle, every hoof, paw and footprint led inevitably to the devout certainty of death's cold embrace.
Yes . . . even so . . .
He'd heard the soft scrape of a lizard's nails across a stone and its red eyes blinked as the lizard turned and skittered off along the far edge of the water hole.
During the night he'd relished and savored the crackle of the fire as it sought out what elements of life remained in the desert wasteland. He'd listened and watched as the once familiar sound of porous wood, long dried and dead, came to life for a short time as if summoned upon to its final purposeâits last waltz down on the hardpan belly of the earth. He'd heard the flames bow and rustle.
Sound moved through his heart as it never had before he'd lost it. And now he breathed deep, testing the reverberation of his warm breath back in his nasal cavity. It had been there throughout the night. Now it was gone. His breath was no longer audible to him. Inside his skull there was once again only flat, white silence.
And there it was. . . . He wiped a palm beneath his eye.
He sat at the rocky edge Fozlo Garlet had fallen from the night before when his brother's bullet split his brainâthe same bullet that had given him back his hearing for a time. Yes, it had been a strange and puzzling night, he reminded himself, staring at the sunlight, getting his share of the sun's raging energy before it grew too bright and hot for him to stand. He'd decided he would call last night,
La noche de los hermanos blancosâ
the night of the white brothers.
He didn't hear Prew Garlet struggle to his feet and look all around the campsite. He didn't hear the footsteps across the ground behind him. Yet, he was not
startled when he felt Prew's hand take him by the shoulder. He turned and looked up at Prew's face. He knew he was being spoken to, but the words were too distant for him to understand.
“Goddamn it, Bird!” said Prew, looking down at the dark, flat stare. “What? Are you ignoring me now? You forgot how to speak English,
again
?”
The Bluebird only nodded in agreement and rose to his feet. He gestured toward the rekindled fire where a pot of fresh coffee sent a strong aroma wafting on the morning air.
“Hell, yes . . . ,” Prew whispered painfully, raising a hand to the side of his head. As he turned toward the fire, he saw Foz's blaze-faced roan standing off the side, alone, tied to a rock spur. The big horse milled restlessly hoof to hoof, back and forth, whinnying, stirring dust. The other horses stood calmly where they'd been hitched all night. His own horse had been saddled, so had the Bluebird's, its saddlebags bulging with dynamite. Foz's and Tillman's saddles still lay in the dirt near the campfire.
“My God, no . . . ,” Prew said under his breath, raising his other hand to his head as well. He staggered in place, then straightened and looked at the Bluebird. “I remember what happened, but only sort of.” He looked all around, at the blood in the dirt, but he didn't see Tillman's body. All he saw were the marks of bootheels where the Bluebird had dragged the dead outlaw to the rocky edge and flung him over it.
“You . . . took care of everything?” he asked haltingly, looking at the Bluebird.
The Bluebird only nodded and followed him to the campfire. Prew looked at the ground a few feet away and caught a flash of Foz's roan lying dead in a pool of dark blood, its throat slit, a deep bloody gash revealing windpipe and tendons.
Jesus . . . !
So real was the image, he had to bat his eyes and shake it from his sight. He looked over at the big roan to assure himself, seeing it still milling, agitated and restless.
All right,
he told himself,
that's enough of that. . . .
The mescal was still at work in his brain. But he wasn't going to give in to it.
Turning to the Bluebird as they walked on to the campfire, he asked, “Had you ever drank any stuff like that before?”
The Bluebird, seeing Prew's lips move, not able to make out the distant muffled sound of his voice, only gave his usual nod, and walked on.
“Hell, what am I asking, sure you have,” Prew said.
At the fire the two sat down and poured hot coffee into tin cups and drank in silence until Prew heard the sound of horses drawing near them from along the hill trail. He picked up his rifle and checked it. Seeing him stand, looking across the campsite where the trail entered the water hole, the Bluebird also stood up and turned with Prew, gun in hand toward the sound of the horses. As they watched, two horses rode into sight and stopped. The riders sat staring for a moment. Finally one nudged his horse a step closer.
“Hello, the camp,” he said. Then he called out, “Prew Garlet, is that you?”
Prew recognized the two outlaws, Lester Stevens
and Mason Gorn, from the old Mexican trade settlement. The Bluebird stood staring blankly.
“It's me all right,” Prew said. “Howdy, Lester. Howdy, Mason. Last I saw you two, I recall you saying you had us all covered at the settlement if any lawmen came snooping.”
“We did say that,” said Stevens. “The fact is no lawman ever showed up snooping.” He grinned. “I reckon our reputation must be growing.”
“Are you going to call us in, or what?” Gorn said.
“Yep, come on in,” said Prew, lowering his rifle. “We've got coffee boiled, if you brought a cup.”
“We've got one,” said Stevens, the two of them nudging their horses closer. At ten feet away, they stopped the animals, stepped down from their saddles and rummaged tin cups out of their saddlebags. “Had we known it was you up here, we'd have rode up last night. We heard shooting from half across the flats. For all we knew it was Apache bucks drunk on trade liquor, shooting at one another for practiceâcrazy as Apache are.” He looked the Bluebird up and down and said, “No offense.”
“He's not Apache,” Prew said, seeing the Bluebird only staring at the two.
“Oh . . . ,” said Stevens. “Anyways that's what we figured, so we didn't butt in.” As he spoke the two walked forward, tin cups in hand. Looking all around they saw black dried blood on the dirt.
“Is everything okay here?” Gorn asked.
“It'll do,” Prew said. He felt a tightness at the back of
his neck. Watching them, he caught a flash of them both dead on the ground, their horses turning and racing away. Knowing it was the mescal playing tricks on him, he squeezed his eyes shut, then flung them open wide. The two gunmen were still walking toward him. They stopped and turned to the fire. Gorn picked up the coffeepot and filled his cup.
“Dang, Prew, you look like you've been up chasing the moon all night,” said Stevens. “Where's your brothers, anyway?”
“What's it to you, Stevens?” Prew said heatedly. As soon as he'd heard his voice turn angry, he regretted it, but it was too late.
“Hey, I'm just asking, is all,” said Stevens, his attitude also changing, his smile falling away from his face. “Don't go getting high-hat on me.”
“I didn't mean to get testy,” Prew said. As soon as he'd said that he realized that too was a mistake. Once he'd spoken in anger he never should have come down from it. With men like Stevens and Gorn, it paid to stand your ground no matter what.
“Hear that?” said Gorn with a flat, unfriendly grin. “Prew's apologizing. I believe he's had himself a change of heart.” He stood with his thumb hooked in his gun belt only inches away from his gun butt.
“Is that what you're doing, Prew Garlet?” said Stevens. “You apologizing for acting cross with me? Are you having a change of heart, or just a weakness of nerves?”
“Don't push it, Lester,” Prew said. The Bluebird stood
watching, trying to make out what might be expected of him. After misunderstanding Prew's signal last night, he wanted to be sure of himself before he acted.
“What . . . ?” said Stevens, in a dark, serious tone. “Did you just say,
don't push it
?”
“Yeah, that's what I said,” Prew replied.
He stared at Stevens, his hand also poised near his holstered Colt. As he stared, he caught another quick flash of the two gunmen lying dead in the dirt, their horses spooked, racing away in a rise of dust.
Damn . . . ! What was all this . . . ?
He forced himself to blink and try to clear his foggy mind. All right, now that things were back as they should be.
“Something's wrong with him, Lester,” Gorn cut in. “Look at him. He acts like he's losing his mind.”
Stevens didn't answer right away. He glanced at the drag marks in the dirt left by the Bluebird when he'd pulled Tillman over to the edge and tossed him out. As his eyes followed the marks so did he. He stopped at the edge and looked down and did a quick double take. Then he turned back to Prew and the Bluebird and with a nasty grin as he spoke to Gorn.
“Come over here, Mason, and take a look at this,” he said.
Gorn stepped over warily, keeping his eyes on Prew and the Bluebird. At the edge beside Stevens, he stared down and was taken aback.
“Uh-oh,” he said. “I see feet sticking out down there.”
Stevens chuckled and cut back in.
“Has somebody been naughty here?” he said. “Prew,
am I wrong in thinking that you two have done something untoward?” He let his hand fall away from his gun. “Because, if that's the case, it's no skin offâ”
Prew's Colt came up, cocked and aimed. The shot hit Stevens before he could even finish his sentence. He spun with the impact and flopped to the ground face-first. Beside him, Gorn started to make a move, but Prew's Colt swung to him and fired before he cleared his gun from its holster. He flipped backward, tried to rise, but then collapsed in the dirt. Both of their horses, spooked by the sudden gunfire, spun and bolted away. Prew stood watching as though frozen in place, wondering what had prompted him to kill these two. It was none of their business what had happened here the night before, and it was likely Stevens had been on the verge of telling him so. But it was too late now. He stood watching as the Bluebird trotted off after the horses as they slowed to a halt a few yards away.
Jesus . . .
He looked down at the smoking gun and turned it in his hand as if in a trance. For a moment he had a hard time realizing which image had been real and which one had not. As the Bluebird ran back leading the two horses and stood before him, Prew had to bat his eyes, close them for a second and reopen them, testing himself.
The Bluebird stood with a trace of a tight grin on his face, the reins to the dead outlaws' horses in hand. He nodded at the two bodies on the ground.
“Throw them over the cliff?” he asked.
Prew stared at him for a moment, then nodded in reply.
“Yes, get rid of them,” he said. “Turn all these spare horses loose. We don't need any Golden Riders coming by and finding any of them.”
“No . . . we don't need that,” the Bluebird said, seeming to understand him perfectly. He started to turn away, to where Foz's, Tillman's and the other two dead gunmen's horses stood bunched together.
“Hey. Hold it, Bird,” said Prew. When the Bluebird turned back to him, he asked, “How come you're understanding what I'm saying now?”
The Bluebird gave him a flat, blank stare.
“I hear things better around you,” he said.
At the end of a winding hill trail Braxton Kane sat his dapple-gray horse between his two right-hand men, Dayton Short and Earl Faraday, two former guerilla riders from the Missouri-Kansas border wars. The two guerilla riders had thrown in with Kane and his Golden Riders when the law had gotten too hot on them everywhere except Colorado Territory. Most of his other men referred to Short and Faraday as Kane's Bulldogs. When Kane needed something special taken care of, these two were his top men to get the job done, no matter how bloody the work.
“Something bothering you, Boss?” Short asked, seeing how Kane studied the trail below with a concerned look on his face.
Kane didn't answer right away. He gave Short a grim look and waited, as if settling something in his mind.
“You men recall it ever taking this long to get everybody gathered in for a big job?” he said finally.
The two gunmen nudged their horses closer to the trail's edge on either side of him.
“Now that you mention it,” said Short, “Earl was just saying the other day how it seems like it's taking your brother Cordy and some of the others a long time to get here.” He grinned beneath a long, drooping black mustache. “I went so far as to say there ain't enough whores twixt here and Abilene to keep a man from one of our
big
jobs.”
“So, you both think there's something holding them?” said Braxton.
“Well,” said Faraday, “if they ain't here, there must be something holding them up. Usually by this time you've got yourself, twentyâthirty men here, easy enough.”