The Lawless West (17 page)

Read The Lawless West Online

Authors: Louis L'Amour

“Look, Chapin”—I leaned over the table—“I’ve known a dozen frontier towns tougher than this one. To each came law and order, but it took a fight to get them. The murderers, cheats, and swindlers must be stamped out before the honest citizens can have peace. And it’s peace that I’m fighting for. You, more than anybody else, can build the situation to
readiness for it with your paper. Write about it. Get the upright citizens prepared to enforce it, once this battle is over.”

He nodded, then glanced at me. “What about you? You’re a gunfighter. In such a community there is no place for such a man.”

That made me grin. “Chapin, I never drew a gun on a man in my life who didn’t draw on me first, or try to. And while I may be a gunfighter, I’m soon to be a rancher and a solid citizen. Count on me to help.”

“Even to stopping this war?”

“What war? Ball had a ranch. He was a peaceful old man who wanted no trouble from anyone, but he was weaker than the Bar M or the CP, so he died. He turned the ranch over to me on the condition that I keep it. If protecting one’s property is war, then we’ll have it for a long time.”

“You could sell out.”

“Run? Is that what you mean? I never ducked out of a good fight yet, Chapin, and never will. When they stop fighting me, I’ll hang up my guns. Until then, I shall continue to fight.” Filling my glass, I added: “Don’t look at the overall picture so long that you miss the details.”

“What do you mean?”

“Look for motives. What are the origins of this fight? I’d start investigating the participants, and I mean neither Maclaren nor Pinder.” Getting up, I put my hat on my head and added: “Ever hear of a man named Booker at Silver Reef? A lawyer?”

“He’s an unmitigated scoundrel, and whatever he does he’s apt to get away with. If there’s a loophole in the law he doesn’t know, then nobody knows it.”

“Then find out why he’s interested in this fight
and, when the Slade boys drift into this country, ask yourself why they are here. Also, ask yourself why Morgan Park is meeting Booker in secret.”

Olga was not in town, so I turned the buckskin toward the Bar M. A cowhand with one foot bandaged was seated on the doorstep when I rode up. He stared, his jaw dropping.

“Howdy,” I said calmly, taking out the makings. “I’m visiting on the ranch and don’t want any trouble. As far as you boys are concerned, I’ve no hard feelings.”

“You’ve no hard feelin’s! What about me? You durned near shot my foot off!”

I grinned at him. “Next time you’ll stay under cover. Anyway, what are you gripin’ about? You haven’t done a lick of work since it happened!”

Somebody chuckled. I looked around and saw Canaval. “I reckon he did it on purpose, Sabre.”

“Excuse?”
the injured man roared. Disgusted, he rose and limped off.

“What you want here, Sabre?” Canaval asked, still smiling.

“Just visiting.”

“Sure you’re welcome?”

“No, I’m not sure. But if you’re wondering if I came looking for trouble, I didn’t. If trouble comes to me on this ranch now, it will be because I’m pushed and pushed hard. If you’re the guardian angel of peace, just relax. I’m courtin’.”

“Rud won’t take kindly to that. He may have me order you off.”

“All right, Canaval, if he does, and you tell me to go, I’ll go. Only one thing…you keep Park off me. I’m not ready for him, and, when it comes, I’d rather she didn’t see it.”

“Fair enough.” He tossed his cigarette into the yard. “You’ll not be bothered under those circumstances. Only”—he grinned and his eyes twinkled—“you might be wrong about Olga. She might like to see you tangle with Park.”

Starting up the steps, I remembered something. “Canaval!”

He turned sharply, ready on the instant.

“A friendly warning,” I said. “Some of the people who don’t like me also want your boss out of here. To get him out, you have to go first. If you hear of the Slades in this country, you’ll know they’ve come for you and your boss.”

His eyes searched mine. “The Slades?”

“Yeah, for you and Maclaren. Somebody is saving me for dessert.”

He was standing there, looking after me, when I knocked. Inside a voice answered that set my blood pounding. “Come in!”

Chapter 7

As I entered, there was an instant when my reflection was thrown upon the mirror beside hers. Seeing my gaze over her shoulder, she turned, and we stood there, looking at ourselves in the mirror—a tall, dark young man in a dark blue shirt, black silk neckerchief, black jeans, and tied-down holsters with their walnut-stocked guns, and Olga in a sea-green gown, filmy and summery-looking.

She turned quickly to face me. “What are you doing here? My father will be furious!”

“He’ll have to get over it sometime, and it might as well be right now.”

She searched my face. “You’re still keeping up that foolish talk? About marrying me?”

“It isn’t foolish. Have you started buying your trousseau?”

“Of course not!”

“You’d better. You’ll need something to wear, and I won’t have much money for a year or two.”

“Matt”—her face became serious—“you’d better go. I’m expecting Morgan.”

I took her hands. “Don’t worry. I promised Canaval there would be no trouble, and there will be none, no matter what Morgan Park wants to do or tries to do.”

She was unconvinced and tried to argue, but I was thinking how lovely she was. Poised, her lovely throat bare, she was something to set a man’s pulses pounding.

“Matt!” She was angry now. “You’re not even listening! And don’t look at me like that!”

“How else should a man look at a woman? And why don’t we sit down? Is this the way you receive guests at the Bar M? At the Two Bar we are more thoughtful.”

“So I’ve heard,” she said dryly. Her anger faded. “Matt? How do you feel? I mean those wounds? Are they all right?”

“Not all right, but much better. I’m not ready for Morgan Park yet, but I will be soon. He won’t be missed much when he’s gone.”

“Gone?” She was surprised. “Remember that I like Morgan.”

“Not very much.” I shrugged. “Yes, gone. This country isn’t big enough to hold both of us even if you weren’t in it.”

She sat down opposite me and her face was flushed a little. She looked at me, then looked away, and neither of us said anything for a long minute. “It’s nice here,” I said at last. “Your father loves this place, doesn’t he?”

“Yes, only I wish he would be content and stop trying to make it bigger.”

“Men like your father never seem to learn when they have enough.”

“You don’t talk like a cowhand, Matt.”

“That’s because I read a book once.”

“Key told me you had been all over the world. He checked up on you. He said you had fought in China and South Africa.”

“That was a long time ago.”

“How did you happen to come West?”

“I was born in the West, and then I always wanted to return to it and have a ranch of my own, but there wasn’t anything to hold me down, so I just kept on drifting from place to place. Staying in one place did not suit me unless there was a reason to stay, and there never was…before.”

Tendrils of her dark hair curled against her neck. The day was warm, and I could see tiny beads of perspiration on her upper lip. She stood up suddenly, uneasily. “Matt, you’d better go. Father will be coming and he’ll be furious.”

“And Morgan Park will be coming. And it doesn’t matter in the least whether they come or not. I came here to see you, and, as long as they stay out of the way, there’ll be no trouble.”

“But, Matt…” She stepped closer to me, and I took her by the elbows. She started to step back, but I drew her to me swiftly. I took her chin and turned her head slightly. She resisted, but the continued pressure forced her chin to come around. She looked at me then, her eyes wide and more beautiful than I would ever have believed eyes could be, and then I kissed her.

We stood there, clinging together tightly, and then she pulled violently away from me. For an instant
she looked at me, and then she moved swiftly to kiss me again, and we were like that when hoofs sounded in the yard. Two horses.

We stepped apart, but her eyes were wide and her face was pale when they came through the door, her breast heaving and her white teeth clinging to her lower lip. They came through the door, Rud Maclaren first, and then Morgan Park, dwarfing Maclaren in spite of the fact that he was a big man. When they saw me, they stopped.

Park’s face darkened with angry blood. He started toward me, his voice hoarse with fury. “Get out! Get out, I say!”

My eyes went past him to Maclaren. “Is Park running this place, or are you? It seems to me he’s got a lot of nerve, ordering people off the place of Rud Maclaren.”

Maclaren flushed. He didn’t like my being there, but he disliked Park’s usurping of authority even more. “That’ll do, Morgan! I’ll order people out of my own home!”

Morgan Park’s face was ugly at that minute, but, before he could speak, Canaval appeared in the door. “Boss, Sabre said he was visitin’, not huntin’ trouble. He said he would make no trouble and would go when I asked him. He also said he would make no trouble with Park.”

Before Maclaren could reply, Olga said quickly: “Father, Mister Sabre is my guest. When the time comes, he will leave. Until then, I wish him to stay.”

“I won’t have him in this house!” Maclaren said angrily. He strode to me, the veins in his throat swelling. “Damn you, Sabre! You’ve a gall to come here after shootin’ my men, stealin’ range that
rightly belongs to me, an’ runnin’ my cattle out of Cottonwood Wash!”

“Perhaps,” I admitted, “there’s something in what you say, but I think we have no differences we can’t settle without fighting. Your men came after me first. I never wanted trouble with you, Rud, and I think we can reach a peaceful solution.”

It took the fire out of him. He was still truculent, still wanting to throw his weight around, but mollified. Right then I sensed the truth about Rud Maclaren. It was not land and property he wanted so much as to be known as the biggest man in the country. He merely knew of no way to get respect and admiration other than through wealth and power.

Realizing that gave me an opening. “I was talking to Chapin today. If we are going to be safe, we must stop all this fighting, and the only way it can be done is through the leadership of the right man. I think you’re that man, Maclaren.”

He was listening, and he liked what he heard.

“You’re the big man of the community,” I added. “If you make a move for peace, others will follow.”

“The Pinders wouldn’t listen,” he protested. “You know that. You killed Rollie, but if you hadn’t, Canaval might have. Jim will never rest until you’re dead. And he hates me and all I stand for.”

Morgan Park was listening, his eyes hard and watchful. He had never imagined that Maclaren and I would talk peace, and, if we reached a settlement, his plans were finished.

“If Pinder and the CP were alone, they would have to become outlaws to persist in this fight. If the fight continues, all the rustlers in the country will
come in here to run off our herds while we fight. Did it ever fail? When honest men fall out, thieves always profit. Moreover, you’ll break yourself paying gunman’s wages. From now on they’ll come higher.”

Olga was listening with some surprise and, I believed, with respect. Certainly I had gone further than I had ever believed possible. My own instinct is toward fighting, yet I have always been aware of the futility of it. Now I could see that, if the fighting ended, all our problems would be simple and easily settled. The joker in the deck was Morgan Park; he had everything to lose by a settlement, and nothing to gain.

Park interrupted suddenly. “I wouldn’t trust all this talk, Rud. Sabre sounds good, but he’s got some trick in mind. What’s he planning? What’s he trying to cover?”

“Morgan!” Olga protested. “I’m surprised at you. Matt is sincere and you know it.”

“I know nothing of the kind,” he replied shortly. “I’m surprised that you would defend this…this killer.”

He was looking at me as he spoke, and it was then I said the one thing I had wanted to say, the hunch I could not prove. “At least,” I replied, “my killings have been in fair fights, by men trying to kill me. I’ve never killed a man who had no gun, and who would have been helpless against me in any case.”

Morgan Park stiffened and his face grew livid. Yet I knew from the way his eyes searched my face that he detected the undercurrent of meaning and he was trying to gauge the depth of my knowledge. It was D’Arcy I had in mind, for D’Arcy had known something about Park and had been slain for what
he knew, or because he might tell others what he knew. I was sure of that.

“It isn’t only rustlers,” I continued to Maclaren, “but others have schemes they can only bring to success through trouble here. There are those who wish this fight to continue so they may get rights and claims they could never secure if there was peace.”

Morgan Park was glaring, fighting for control. He could see that unless he kept his temper and acted quickly his plans might be ruined. Something of what I’d said apparently touched Maclaren, for he was nodding.

“I’ll have to think it over,” Maclaren said. “This is no time to make decisions.”

“By all means.” Turning, I took Olga’s arm. “Now if you’ll excuse us?”

Morgan’s face was a study in concentrated fury. He started forward, blood in his eye. Putting Olga hurriedly to one side, I was ready for him, but Canaval stepped between us.

“Hold it!” Canaval’s command stopped Park in his tracks. “That’s all, Park. We’ll have no trouble here.”

“What’s the matter?” he sneered. “Sabre need a nursemaid now?”

“No.” The foreman was stiff. “He gave me his word, and I gave mine. As long as he is on this place, my word holds. If the boss wants him to go, he’ll go.”

In the silence that followed, Maclaren turned to me. “Sabre, I’ve no reason to like you, but you are my daughter’s guest and you talk straight from the shoulder. Remain as long as you like.”

Park started to speak, but realized he could do
nothing. He turned his heavy head, staring at me from under heavy brows. That gaze was cold and deadly. “We can settle our differences elsewhere, Sabre.”

Olga was worried when we got outside. “You shouldn’t have come, Matt. There’ll be trouble. Morgan is a bad enemy.”

“He was my enemy, anyway. That he is a bad enemy, I know. I think another friend of yours found that out.”

She looked up quickly, real fear in her eyes. “What do you mean?”

“Your friend, D’Arcy. He comes of a family that does not frighten easily. Did you ever have a note of acknowledgement from him?”

“No.”

“Strange. I’d have said such a man would never neglect such an obvious courtesy.”

We stood together then, looking out at the night and the desert, no words between us but needing no words, our hearts beating together, our blood moving together, feeling the newness of love discovered. The cottonwood leaves brushed their pale green hands together, and their muted whispering seemed in tune with our own thoughts. This was my woman. The one I would walk down the years with. The leaves said that and my blood said it, and I knew the same thoughts were in her, reluctant as she might be to admit it.

“This trouble will pass,” I said softly, “as the night will pass, and, when it has gone, and the winds have blown the dust away, then I shall take you to Cottonwood Wash…to live.” Her hand stayed in mine, and I continued. “We’ll build something there to last
down the years until this will all seem a bad dream, a nightmare dissipated by the morning sunlight.”

“But could you ever settle down? Could you stay?”

“Of course. Men don’t wander for the love only of wandering. They wander because they are in search of something. A place of one’s own, a girl, a job accomplished. It is only you who has mattered since the day I rode into the streets of Hattan’s Point and saw you there.”

Turning toward her, I took her by the elbows and her breath caught, then came quickly and deeply, her lips parted slightly as she came into my arms, and I felt her warm body melt against mine, and her lips were warm and seeking, urgent, passionate. My fingers ran into her hair and along her scalp, and her kisses hurt my lips as mine must have hurt hers. All the fighting, all the waiting melted into nothingness then.

She pulled back suddenly, frightened yet excited, her breasts rising and falling as she fought for control. “This isn’t good! We’re…we’re too violent. We’ve got to be more calm.”

I laughed then, full of the zest of living and loving and seeing the glory of her there in the moonlight. I laughed and took her arms again. “You’re not exactly a calm person.”

“I?” A flush darkened her face. “Well, all right then. Neither of us is calm.”

“Need we be?” My hands reached for her, and then I heard someone whistling, and irritably I looked up to hear feet grating on the gravel path.

It was Canaval. “Better ride,” he said. “I wouldn’t put it past Park to dry-gulch a man.”

“Canaval!” Olga protested. “How can you say that?”

His slow eyes turned to her. “You think so, too, ma’am. You always was an uncommon smart girl. You’ve known him for what he was for a mighty long time.” He turned back to me. “Mean what you said back there? About peace and all?”

“You bet I did. What can we gain by fighting?”

“You’re right,” Canaval agreed, “but there’ll be bloodshed before it’s over. Pinder won’t quit. He hates Rud Maclaren and now he hates you. He won’t back up or quit.” Canaval turned to Olga. “Let me talk to Sabre alone, will you? There’s something he should know.”

“All right.” She gave me her hand. “Be careful. And good night.”

We watched her walk back up the path, and, when my eyes turned back to him, his were surprisingly soft. I could see his expression even in the moonlight. “Reminds me of her mother,” he said quietly.

“You knew her?” I was surprised.

“She was my sister.”

That was something I could never have guessed.

“She doesn’t know,” he explained. “Rud and I used to ride together. I was too fast with a gun and killed a man with too many relatives. I left and Rud married my sister. From time to time we wrote, and, when Rud was having trouble with rustlers, I came out to lend a hand. He persuaded me to stay.”

He looked around at me. “One thing more. What did you mean about the Slades?”

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