Novel 1966 - Kilrone (v5.0) (11 page)

Read Novel 1966 - Kilrone (v5.0) Online

Authors: Louis L'Amour

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The risks he had accepted when he took the job. He had ridden with good men, and he had ridden with the glory-hunters and the hardheads. A man had to take it as it came.

Paddock walked back to the fire and sat down on a rock, stiff and saddle-sore. He looked over at Laban. “You think we’re on a wild-goose chase?” he asked.

“Yep.”

“We won’t find any Indians?”

“Oh, you’ll find Indians, all right. You’ll find a passel of them when you want ’em least. Only you won’t find the Dog. Right about now he’s burning your post.”

“Nonsense!” Pryor said sharply. “No Indian would dare attack an army post!”

Hank Laban did not bother to reply. He almost never bothered to reply to Lieutenant Eden Pryor, and the Lieutenant was growing irritated. He resented Laban’s attitude and his own inability to impress the scout. Pryor disliked Laban’s careless, almost slovenly appearance as much as he disliked the respect that all the older soldiers gave to his opinions.

Paddock smoked in silence for a few minutes and then suggested, “Laban, why don’t you sketch out the route for me? I’ve never been over this trail before.”

Laban hunched forward and took up a twig from the edge of the fire. He poked in the ground. “Here we are. We’ll cross the upper canyon of the Little Owyhee right about here,” and he drew the line in the sand. “Then we’ll strike out for Pole Creek. Over yonder there’s a travois trail and we’ll follow it right up into the corner here where the Owyhee and the Little Owyhee join up.”

He made a cross in the sand “Right there, Major, we may run into plenty of grief. There’s an Injun trail down the cliffs—the boys will have to hoof it and lead their hosses. Now, I say there’s a trail. It’s just a rock slide, and if the shelf along there should topple over some of that trail would be gone. I mean, if the trail’s still there we’ll take it. Ever’ time I go that way I expect to find it gone.

“That’s rough country with a lot of weathered rock,” he went on, “and if a few feet of it should go we’d be up the creek. Well, we go down that slide, an’ we’ll have a time. What we’d best do is put a few men on the rim and then send a few more down below to cover us. If those Injuns catch us on that slide they’ll cut us in half.”

“Then why do we go that way?” Pryor interrupted.

“After we cross the plateau between the rivers, we’ll still have the Middle Fork to cross. From there on it’s ten, twelve miles to where Mellett will be.”

“I asked you why we didn’t go around.” Pryor’s tone was coldly furious.

Paddock looked up sharply. “Lieutenant Pryor, Mr. Laban is explaining a route to me. I would be pleased if you would not interrupt.”

Pryor started to reply, then stood up and turned away abruptly. Corporal Steve Blaine, who had no particular liking for Pryor, nonetheless felt sorry for him now. “Long way around,” he commented to nobody in particular; “might be fifty miles further.”

“I didn’t ask you!” Pryor snapped, and was immediately sorry. He strode off into the darkness, feeling like a spanked schoolboy.

By the Lord Harry, he was thinking, if he had that Laban in his command for just one week!
Just one week!
The trouble was, Hank Laban was a civilian employee and able to quit whenever he liked; and as Pryor had been given to understand before this, he was inclined to do just that on the slightest provocation. And Colonel Webb had assured Pryor only a week before that such men were hard to get.

Later, after Laban had disappeared to his blankets somewhere out in the dark, Frank Paddock explained to Pryor: “There aren’t many trails in this country, Eden, and Laban knows them. There are very few men who do. We need him very badly.”

After that Paddock went to his bedroll and stretched out. He was dead-tired, and every muscle ached. He was confused as well, for now that he had gone too far to turn back he was attacked by doubts. When he had made his decision he had been positive it was the right one, and he still told himself this was so. But what if he was wrong? What if the post, so ill-defended, was attacked?

He sat bolt upright, and for a moment was in a state of blind panic, on the verge of ordering the command to return to the post. Then he fought back his fears, and presently he lay down again.

Maybe he had been a fool to go. So why had he gone? Was it really because he could trap Medicine Dog and score a decisive victory? Or was it to settle once and for all his situation with Denise? If Denise and Kilrone took this opportunity to leave together…But if they did not?

He turned restlessly, unable to relax, driven to wakefulness by the ghosts of his fears and doubts.

He was right, he decided finally. They would not attack the post. The major Indian force was here, lying in wait for M Troop and Mellett.

At last he slept. The firelight flickered against the rocks and on the faces of the sleeping men.

 

 

M
ILES AWAY TO the south, Barney Kilrone awakened with a start. Only a faint glow from the stove illuminated the office of the post commander, where he was. In a corner, on a pallet, were Denise Paddock and Betty Considine. Stella Rybolt lay against the inner wall, and Hopkins and his wife not far away.

For several minutes Kilrone lay quietly, wondering what it was that had wakened him.

And then he heard it again.

Somebody outside was digging, digging under the wall, under the floor where he lay.

The sound was faint but unmistakable; it was a whispering sound of movement, and the rustle of dirt falling in a narrow space. Somebody was trying to undermine the back wall of Headquarters building.

Under
mine

mine!

Explosives…

Swiftly, silently, he got to his feet.

 

 

Chapter 10

 

T
HERE WAS NO sound inside the building, nor did Kilrone make any in his passage. Tiptoeing, he moved as one accustomed to a need for silence. The firelight from the grate of the stove gave a faint red glow in the room, showing here and there the face of a sleeper—child, woman, or man—each seeming to rest in the comfort of a dream.

For a moment Kilrone looked on them, careful not to fix his eyes long on any one of them, for such an intent look, he knew, seemed to have a way of making a sleeper awaken. He looked on them with gloom, for what lay before them in a few hours might be violence and death; some of these had seen violence and death before this, and might again if they survived. He could not promise anything, either for them or himself.

In the outer room Draper, one of the teamsters, sat reading a battered magazine. He was bearded and somewhat bald—a tough, strong man, and a veteran of several Indian fights. He sat near enough to the wall to hear anything stirring outside, and his rifle was close to his hand. He looked up when Kilrone came into the room. “Quiet so far,” he said, “but that means nothing.”

“There’s something out back,” Kilrone said. “I’m going to have a look.”

“Guards just came in,” Draper commented. “Gittin’ near the time.”

“All right. Watch for me.”

Kilrone eased the door open, listened, and then was gone into the darkness. Draper stared at the closed door a moment, and picked up his magazine again. But he did not read; he simply held it in his hands, listening.

Kilrone had moved only a step after closing the door. The night was dark, overcast, and cool. After the stuffy atmosphere of the building the outside air felt wonderful. He took time to fill his lungs a time or two while he listened for movement.

Then he went to the corner of the building, cast a quick glance around the corner, then stepped past, careful not to let his clothing brush the wall. He wasted no time, but moved on cat feet to the further corner and peered around.

A man was crouched in the darkness at the foundation, working stealthily. But even as Kilrone saw him, the man got up swiftly and moved away, stringing something out behind him.

Kilrone waited, watching him slip into a ditch that drained runoff water away from the buildings and the parade ground, and then he waited a little longer. He saw the man move away, and he was lost in the darkness.

Kneeling where the man had been, Kilrone dug carefully into the loose earth. His hands found a box and a fuse leading from it. Gingerly, he lifted the box from its hole. The cover was merely laid on, and he lifted it. Inside were three cans of black powder, blasting powder.

Placed as they had been, there was enough to have blasted a good-size hole in the back wall of the building, and to have stunned or killed anyone in the room. For an instant he crouched there, considering. Then, with the box under his left arm, his six-shooter in his right hand, he followed the fuse.

It ended beside a rock at the edge of the ditch. The idea was clear enough. Once the attack began, the fuse would be fired and the resulting explosion would come close to putting anybody inside the Headquarters building out of action.

How about the other buildings? There was little time, but they must be checked.

Who had done this? It was no Indian trick, he was sure of that; and the man he had seen, although he had seen no more than his bulk in the blackness, had been no Indian.

He knelt beside the rock and moved some of the stones where the fuse had been waiting for the match. Then he dug out a chunk of sod with his bowie knife and quickly dug further into the soft earth beneath. When he had hollowed out a hole there, he cut the fuse to six inches, replaced it, and buried the box in the bank, as carefully as he could in the darkness. The rest of the fuse he left as it had been, trailed out upon the ground.

He went first to the warehouse. The back wall was the likely place, but he found nothing there. Undoubtedly the ground had been too hard to dig there without making noise, for a path led right along that wall. On the far end, however, he found another box, this one containing only one can of powder. He followed it out and did the same thing as before.

Next he went to the hospital, but after searching for a few minutes he found nothing. By now it was growing light, and he did not dare to search any longer.

Draper was at the door to let him in. Kells and Hopkins were standing by, and Rudio was at the stove, making coffee.

Betty Considine was waiting for him. “Where would you like the children to be?” she asked. “Over in the corner?”

“We’ll pull that desk over and turn it on its side,” he said, “and put the filing cabinet there, too. Drape what bedding you can spare over the desk and the chairs. I’ve seen a folded letter stop a spent bullet.”

“I’d like to feed the stock,” Kells suggested.

“Stay where you are. It’s my guess you’d never make it. Anyway, they’ll take the horses if they haven’t already.”

No doubt the Indians were waiting for just that sort of thing. Lying in wait, they could attack the force remaining inside with small risk to themselves.

The fire in the stoves—there was one in each room—had been built up. Outside, the sky was faintly gray; the shapes of the buildings were taking form. No lights appeared anywhere.

Men moved to each of the windows, where they crouched, waiting. Stella Rybolt took over serving coffee and preparing breakfast, and Rudio took up his rifle. No lights were lit. Stella Rybolt worked by the glow from the grate of her stove, and as the food was prepared, carried it to the men at the windows.

Under the low clouds of morning the parade ground looked gray and forbidding. The buildings, standing silent and unlighted, were bleak. Nothing stirred.

Betty brought coffee to Kilrone and sat down on the floor beside him “Are they out there?” she asked.

“You can bet on it.”

She spoke softly then, that only he might hear. “Did you love her very much? Denise, I mean?”

He shrugged. “Who knows? It was Brittany, in the spring, and we both were young.”

“I somehow thought it was Paris.”

“Paris was in the fall…By that time we were older.”

“You are cynical.”

“No…just wise enough to know that all loves do not last out the summer. And many of them should not. Let that be a lesson to you, Daughter of the General.”

“And when you saw her again she was married to Frank Paddock?”

“Yes…and I was courting a dancer from Vienna.”

“Then why…?”

“Somebody talked to Frank, and he believed there was more than there was. Apparently the idea became something of an obsession with him.”

“Kilrone?” Hopkins spoke from his window. “Something moving down there.”

He got up and went to the window, but stayed well back where he could not easily be seen. Looking down the length of the parade ground, he at first saw nothing. And then he saw a slight stir of movement in the shadows near a barracks. One, then another.

“Hold your fire,” he said; “so far they’ve done nothing.” He went to the window that looked toward the warehouse across a few feet of intervening space. He opened the window and called, “McCracken?”

“There’s about a dozen of them in the brush along the creek.,” McCracken answered.

“Well, hold your fire.”

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