Last Stand at Papago Wells (1957) (6 page)

"I never talked to no girl. I wouldn't know what to say."

"You'll think of something. She's scared, Lonnie, and tied up tight as a fiddle string inside. You ... you're closer to her age, like boys she'd meet at a dance or somewhere. You've got to help her."

"Well ... all right."

Cates climbed the rocks and looked over the desert, refusing Beaupre's offer of a chew of tobacco. "Thanks," Beaupre said, "for pullin' Taylor off me. That was a fair shootin' back yonder."

"Stay away from him."

"Taylor's one of those sanctimonious blisters who believe any accused man is guilty. Hell, I don't want to kill him, but he's got it in his craw and his kind won't quit."

"It'll work out."

Logan Cates was far from sure. Taylor was a tenacious man sure of his own rightness, and not one to back away from trouble. It was this quality in him that could get him killed.

Restlessly, Cates scouted the small perimeter of their position. The three pools lay in the arroyo which fell away gradually from the upper to the lower. The difference in the levels of the first two was slight, the third greater, and from there the arroyo widened to almost a hundred feet. Below it was still wider, much of it choked with brush, while the edges of the arroyo were also a dense thicket. The lookout place chosen was just above the higher and smaller of the tanks. There, among the lava boulders, was a good observation point and an excellent firing position. Lower down the arroyo was the freshly made wall of ocotillo branches and woven brush to corral the horses. The position occupied was extensive, but easily defended, for it was accessible from the outside at few points, and without worming through dense brush it was impossible to see into the corral where the horses were kept. Yet there was much cover for an attacking force as well, cover such as Indians knew well how to use.

Nevertheless, the situation could scarcely be improved. They had water, enough to last for weeks, they had some food, they had ammunition, and they had some good fighting men.

It was almost dusk before Lonnie managed to get close enough to Junie Hatchett to talk. She was drying her hair, which she had washed in water scooped into a rock hollow which served as a basin.

"Sure is good to have a woman around," Lonnie suggested tentatively. "Miss Jennifer likes it, too, I reckon, her being alone with us before."

Junie said nothing, keeping busy with her hair, not even glancing his way. He watched the shadows on the darkening water.

"Mighty pretty here," he said, "an' quiet, too."

She was using the pool for a mirror, but her face was only dimly visible now and soon it would be too dark to see.

"I figure California to be a comin' country," he said, "a man could make a start. Maybe get himself a piece of land."

She sat back on her heels, but did not look at him. Cates, some distance off, was sure she was listening.

"Ain't like I had anybody to go back to," Lonnie said. "I can stay out here easy as not. I like to have me a few cows and some fruit trees. A little place. Somewhere with good water, and a house I build myself. I helped build two, three houses an' I figure I can build me a good one."

Junie looked at herself in the water, but even the dim outline was losing itself in the dark. She felt she was like that, lost in the dark somewhere, and no way out. Only there was a single bright star in the sky over the edge of the lava cliff, and Lonnie Foreman was talking to her.

"Maybe I could find a place near the mountains, somewhere with trees and grass. I like to have a place like that." He paused, looking at the star's bright lantern over the rocks. "Kind of a lot to do ... a man alone like that."

He was silent for several minutes. "You know what I miss out here? I miss jelly an' jam. Back to home we always had it. Ma, she put it up an' when fall come there it was, all in jars in the cellar catching dust, but just waitin' to be et up. I used to like to go down there when I was little, just to see the light from the lantern on those dusty jars full of peaches and cherries and the like. Don't expect I'll ever see jelly like that again. Or jam."

Junie fingered her drying hair and tried to straighten her dress.

"I like it with hot biscuits," he said. "Just thinkin' of it makes me hungry."

Logan Cates looked out over the desert, feeling the coolness, remembering hot biscuits he had known as a boy, and remembering so much else along with it. A man lost a lot, growing up, a lot he could never regain. He shook his head, melancholy, and filled suddenly with a nameless longing.

"I never could talk to girls," Lonnie sounded his defeat. "I never know what to say."

"You talk all right," Junie said.

Chapter
Six

When he heard the quail call he knew their time of waiting would soon be past, for this was no true quail. He could not have told how he knew, it was one of those things a man learned, something he absorbed as he lived in wild country. It was like finding a lost trail in the dark, or one of those prehistoric Indian trails you could not quite see but you knew was a trail just the same.

He also knew they were free of attack during the night--probably.

It was a superstition of many Indian tribes that a warrior slain in the dark must forever wander, lost in the stygian darkness of the space between the worlds of the living and the dead. Their respite would end with the dawn.

But a watch would be kept anyway. There might be skeptics among these Indians, skeptics who ignored the old superstitions. More than once he had been laughed at for being too careful, and had helped to bury some of the men who were not careful.

With the first red arrows of the sun the attack would come out of the desert, for he had seen the dust in the sunset and knew there were more Indians now. He had seen the dust trails against the far blue mountains, hanging like smoke against the distance. The Indians would come out with the new day, their dusty brown bodies seeming to spring from the sand itself, and they would vanish as suddenly. Men had died by the dozen in the desert who had never known an Indian was near; he had himself seen a soldier killed by an Indian the soldier had passed within twenty yards in broad daylight on the open desert.

Uneasy with inaction he went to his gear and shifted from boots to moccasins. Sheehan watched him curiously, and Cates told him, "I'm going to scout around out there."

"You're takin' a chance."

"I get around pretty good."

He went over the rocks and eased himself down at the edge of the ironwood thicket. He took his time, knowing haste could be dangerous, and he settled down in the brush and listened. After a long time he moved, gliding on silent feet among the rocks, making no smallest whisper of sound. Several times he paused to listen, checking all the night sounds. The rustle of leaves, the scurry of a small animal or lizard, the rattle of a pebble loosened by erosion ... these were different sounds than the movement of a man.

When he came out of the desert Jennifer was momentarily frightened. Grant had returned to their saddles for his pipe, and she was alone. To the south the twin peaks of Pinacate were dimly visible against the night sky.

"You frightened me."

Cates stopped beside her, looking at the desert and the night. It was very still; the vast country to the south looked like hell with the fires out. "So peaceful," he said, "and so dangerous."

"Are there Indians out there? Really, I mean?"

"There are."

"But it's so quiet!"

"That's proof enough. The desert has its own small sounds and when you don't hear them something is out there warning them to be still."

"If there are Indians, why did you go out?"

"Looking at the places they'll use for cover when they attack."

"You might have been killed. You were inviting trouble."

"Yes, I might have been killed. Each of us is in deadly danger every instant from now until we get to Yuma. But I wasn't looking for trouble--only a fool takes chances. Fools or children who don't know any better. Danger is never pretty, it's never thrilling. It's dirty, bloody and miserable. It's choking dust, the pain of wounds and waiting that eats your guts out.

"Nobody but a fool or some crazy kid goes hunting trouble. It's different when you meet it face to face on a dark night than when you read of it in a book. All this talk of people who look for adventure is from people who've had no experience."

He dropped his cigarette. "Your father knows. He lived through it, trying to make this country safe for you to grow up in."

"You don't approve of me, do you?"

"What is there to approve of? You are beautiful, of course, yet you resent the very things that made life easy for you. You resent your father. From the summit of the molehill of your Eastern education you judge the mountain of the obstacles your father faced. You"--he turned away from her--"are like the froth on beer. You look nice but you don't mean anything."

He walked to the fire, angry with himself for saying things he had no right to say, for venturing opinions that were none of his business. He did not know Jim Fair, but he knew a little of any man who came to a country like this when Jim Fair came, who stayed and who built something from nothing. It took strength, character, and a kind of dogged determination that was wholly admirable. It also took fighting ability, and above all judgment.

He crouched by the fire and ate the slice of beef Junie Hatchett brought to him between two thick slices of bread. He ate hungrily, careful not to look into the fire. Staring into fires was reserved for tenderfeet or more civilized worlds. A man who looks into a fire sees nothing when he turns quickly to look into the dark, and his momentary blindness may cost his life.

Grant Kimbrough came down from the rocks with Jennifer. She looked angry, and Logan Cates grinned wryly, knowing that it was himself at whom she was angry.

"Find any Indians?" Kimbrough asked, and there was an edge of sarcasm in his tone.

"I wasn't looking for any."

Sergeant Sheehan joined them at the fire, and the light from the flames caught the scattered silver in his hair. "How many d' you figure, Cates?"

"Anywhere from twenty to twice that number. Not more than fifty."

"How can you estimate?" Kimbrough asked.

" 'Paches never travel in big bunches. They live off the desert and there's never food or water enough for a big bunch. Nine out of ten war parties will number from ten to thirty warriors. Churupati could never get more than sixty, and my guess is there are not over twenty or twenty-five out there."

Zimmerman stood by the fire listening. He was a huge, hairy man who badly needed a shave. His mood seemed surly, and he looked up at Cates with a challenge. "You sure about that Indian?"

"Lugo? He's a Pima."

Zimmerman threw the remains of his coffee on the sand with a violent gesture. "So he's a Pima," he said angrily. "I heard you say that before. I say he's an Indian and they're all alike. He should be tied up."

"He won't be," Logan Cates spoke mildly. "He's one of our best men."

"You say. I say the way to begin this fight is to shoot that greasy mongrel."

"Anybody," Cates spoke mildly still, "who lifts a hand against that Indian will answer to me."

Zimmerman hesitated, his face ugly. For a moment it was obvious that he wanted to challenge this statement. Sergeant Sheehan interrupted.

"That's enough of that, Zimmerman. We're all under the command of Cates. You'll obey orders."

"You mean you'd have me court-martialed?" Zimmerman sneered. "Don't take me for a fool! When all this is over there won't be enough of us left to tell the story. You won't carry any tales, nor will anybody else."

Zimmerman walked away into the darkness and Sheehan looked after him in silence.

Beaupre came to the edge of the rocks above. "Cates, there's shootin' off to the east--mighty far off."

He climbed the rocks again, glad to escape the situation at the fire. They listened, but there was no further sound. He seated himself among the rocks near Beaupre and waited for a repetition of the sound, but they heard nothing. Irritably, he considered the situation below. Zimmerman was a dangerous man, unwilling to accept authority, and his remarks to Sheehan, uttered in the tone used, were practically a threat. As if there was not trouble enough with the Indians, there had to be trouble within their own circle.

Despite the fact that he had been pursued by a sheriff's posse, Jim Beaupre was a good man, a solid man, definitely a man to have on your side in any kind of a fight. Cates knew his kind from other times and places, for Beaupre was the sort of man who was handy at any job or with any weapon, and he was the sort who would, when the frontier ended, settle down to one of his jobs without fuss or strain. He would be a teamster, a blacksmith, a small rancher, never wealthy but always hard-working.

And what of you, Logan Cates? he asked himself. Where will you be, and what will you become? Some day he would be too slow with his gun, would break a leg somewhere in the desert or lose his canteen too far from water. It had happened to others, it could happen to him. He would never have the ranch he wanted with a stream of running water and some old oak trees, he would never have the time to do the reading he wanted. His father had been a great one to read; he had been reading the night Dave Home shot him through the window.

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