October, 2014

 
Home | About | Brags | Submissions | Authors | Writing Tips | Donate | Links

Issue #61



All The Tales
A Good Match
by Ray Dean

Missus Charles Weston was used to the sizzle of a pan and heat of a stove. She was used to the hustle and bustle around a kitchen, even one as small as this one was.

There was little comfort in the things surrounding her, they had only been able to bring the essentials from home when she'd come west to Arizona Territory and even now she found herself reaching for items she hadn't been able to fit in the wagon.

Had Charles still been alive she could have thrown a comment to him over her shoulder, give him a smile mixed in with her sighing memories of easier times and have his assurance that she'd have those things again.

But Charles had only made it as far as the Territorial border when he'd lost his battle with some fever that had laid him up for days. She stopped right there and buried him on the highest point of land and made her home beside the wagon, setting up their tent and meager belongings inside. It had only been a month ago, but it felt like the better part of a year.

"Howdy."

She almost missed the greeting even though it must have been bellowed loud enough to breach the memories that filled her thoughts.

"I said 'Howdy to you, Missus!'"

The curious greeting was enough to bring her away from the stove and over to the doorway to see what manner of creature was outside.

The man was as big as a bear, or rather, Missus Weston surmised, as big as she had expected a bear to be. He even managed to lumber about on two feet as he made his way toward her. When he opened his mouth she expected a mighty roar to knock her from her shoes, but she was again surprised as words issued forth from his mouth. "I hear tell you're a right strong woman."

She knew she was the only woman in the area, but it was still difficult to believe that the man was addressing her. "I am sure that I am adequate, if not as strong as some would like me to be."

He looked down at her as one might view an exhibit in a menagerie. "Fancy talk's alright, just as long as you ken understand the way folks 'round here talk. Them's the ones you'll be dealing' with most of the year."

"I expect that I'll get along just fine, Mister . . . "

He waved off the question. "Ain't no 'mister' 'bout me, Missus Weston." Indicating the town's sprawling cluster of buildings with a sweep of his large hand. "Folks 'round here just call me Bear, on the count of me lookin' the way I do." He paused and swept his gaze about the general area and then back at her. "So? Are you gonna say yes?"

She cocked her head at him and found her patience waning at the odd interchange. She had water on to boil and a portion of meat in the pan. "Yes? What question did you ask?"

Bear huffed out a breath and she fancied strong enough to ruffle the stray hairs against her face. "Stubborn woman." He waited for a moment and then seemed to be at the end of his own rope. "Yer a widow."

Quiet for a moment, her gaze dipped to the brush of her hem across the top of her boot before she looked back at up a the man before her. "Yes . . . that I am."

"And me," he continued, his tone softening just the littlest bit, "I'm by myself at my claim." He gestured off toward the low hills that bordered the west side of town.

"That's where most men are, I expect." Missus Weston looked over her shoulder at the front door of her home. "Mister . . . Bear," she wiped her nervous hands on her apron, "if you don't mind, I have supper cooking and—" she looked up into his face and saw the most unexpected thing, hope—pure unadulterated hope, "would you like to stay?"

He straightened his spine as a smile curled beneath his ponderous mustache and she thought he'd managed to grow a few inches with the simple adjustment. "Why, I'd be delighted, Missus Weston."

A moment later he was hustling to the door, only to stop in his tracks just shy and gesture toward the opening. "Womenfolk first."

She lifted her skirt with one hand and stepped in before him. "I'm sorry to be so abrupt, Mister Bear, but I've something on the stove and I didn't want it to burn."

" 'Twould be a shame if it did," he conceded.

She indicated the table and moved herself to the stove, taking up her fork and turning the meat. The scrape of chair legs against the rough hewn floor was followed by a quiet thump and then a groan of wood.

"I wasn't expecting company, so I didn't make a dessert to go along with—"

"That's all right with me, ma'am." She could almost hear the watering of his mouth and she couldn't really blame him, the salted pork was fresh from the barrel and the smell of it along with the biscuits was quiet enough to round out the simple fair she'd intended for her own table. The corner of her apron was firmly in hand as she opened the stove to retrieve the biscuits and she blinked as the heat rolled across her face.

Straightening she turned to table and used her free hand to clear a space, she didn't normally need space for two on the surface.

"Here, I'll hold that for a moment."

The offer was a nice one and before she could think better of it, Bear took the pan from her hands. She finished the quick shift of items on the table before turning back to her guest. "Again, I wasn't expecting company and so I didn't—" she stopped short and gaped at the sight before her. The man was sitting at her table as patient as could be with a burning pan in his bare hands. "Goodness! Give me that!"

Frantic to give him relief she took the pan back with her hands protectively wrapped in her apron corners. With a clatter, the pan was left to rest on the scarred tabletop as she reached for his still bare hands.

"Dear me," she began breathlessly, "you're not supposed to . . . what were you . . . I can't believe—" She turned his hands, one and then the other, over and over, searching for burns or marks left by her pan, but there was nothing. The thick calluses that covered his palms weren't any worse for the contact with the metal.

When she looked up into his face, her own expression tight and near tears, she saw his shocked expression. "Somethin' wrong, Missus?"

She got to her feet, leaning heavily on the table beside her. "Your hands." She gulped air in around the lump in her throat. "I thought you'd burned your hands."

He looked down at his palms and shrugged. "My hands've seen a mess of work in my time and by now I 'spect they've probably got a score of layers to 'em. Comes in handy when I try to cook, haven't drawn blood with the knife yet."

Her hand to her chest, she took in his words and nodded. "You frightened me." A bite of nervous laughter brought tears to her eyes. "Still, I'm glad you weren't hurt."

"Would take more to hurt me than that." He grinned and sat up in the chair, setting the poor thing to groaning again. "I expect it would take more than a brown bear and a pack of wolves to take me down and make me say 'Uncle.'"

His grin was infectious and she felt herself laughing softly as the fear and horror subsided within her.

When she straightened she skirted around him to take out a jar of preserves and set it on the table. "Don't have butter, but my jam should add a little sweetness to the biscuits."

He was quiet for a moment and she looked up only to be startled again. His eyes were soft with some emotion she didn't dare to give a name to, she only knew that again she was also on the verge of tears.

"You lost your man, and I ain't never had a woman to wife," he began by stating the obvious and she was grateful for the boon, for it gave her time to gather her wits, "but you look to be a strong woman and you've got yourself a good heart." He reached out and took her hand in his, a gesture mirrored from a few moments before. "If you'd be agreeable to the idea, I'd like to offer for you . . . make you my bride."

Her mouth was dry, her eyes wet, and some odd emotion filled up the emptiness that she'd believed would always gnaw at her insides.

"I have no experience with mining." She wanted there to be no secrets.

"I have no experience with real cookin' if the truth be told." He gave her a shrug and a look of chagrin. "Less with women, but I'm willin' to learn if you're willin' to teach."

She wrapped her free hand around the back of his and her two hands nearly reached around the width of his one. "You certainly don't waste time, do you?" She didn't wait for an answer before posing another question. "If we were to marry, what would my name be?"

His thoughts pinched up the skin between his brows. "Hmm . . . . Can't have folks callin' you Missus Bear, 'twouldn't be right." He tilted his head to the side and shook it with chagrin. "I guess if we were to be proper you'd be called Missus Elisha Cavanaugh."

Leaning back, she looked at his face, half hidden behind what she could only assume was several months of hair, and wanted to see the man beneath. The name was a proud one, but the rough character before her seemed more like his animal nickname than a man. Still, she could tell that he would remain just as proud no matter what name he carried.

"If folks are used to you one way," she reached for a plate and set it before him. "It might be confusing to change now." Stepping away from him and toward her stove she smiled. "Right now we've a supper to eat and we'll just have to talk about the rest later."

"Later." His eyes followed her as she moved, taking in the subtle shift of weight on her feet as she set the meat on a board and cut it into two portions with a quick slice. He heard the soft hum of a song as if it echoed deep within her body. And he found himself more interested in the soft smell of soap from her skin than the robust scent of the meal she was about to set before him.

They would be a good match, they would fit.

The End

Back to Top
Back to Home



The Last Score
by William S. Hubbartt

"When we gonna get there, Ma?"

The small girl fidgeted in her seat, looking out the window and then she turned around to face her mother and father. Just then, the train car jerked and rocked, jostling the family from side to side. Puffs of gray smoke and an occasional spark blew by as smell of the burning wood permeated the rail car. The rhythmic churning of the locomotive's large wheels could be heard and felt as the train pulled its load up the long incline into the Wyoming mountains.

"Soon, sweetie, soon," said her mother, pulling a small bundle of string from her handbag."Here, sweetie, why don't you play cat's cradle?"

"Like to arrive in Salt Lake late this evening, maybe dinner time," said the girl's father, speaking to his wife, rather than to his daughter. The mother and daughter wore matching floor length blue taffeta dresses with white ribbons tied in a bow in their hair. The father, a well dressed merchant, sporting a string tie with his starched white shirt and pinstriped suit, complimented his family's stylish appearance that spoke of their aristocratic roots in Chicago.

Across the aisle, Garrett Tolliver smiled as he watched family's discussion. Even though the Union Pacific trains now connected Chicago to San Francisco, reducing travel across the great prairie and mountain ranges from two months down to eight days, children were still impatient travelers. The train jerked back and forth again, shaking Garrett back to the reality of this trip. A detective with the famed Pinkerton Agency, he had been hired to investigate a recent string of train robberies affecting the Union Pacific line. He hoped that the safety of this young girl and her family would not be threatened by violence on this trip.

Garrett had alerted the train's engineer and conductor of his presence when he boarded in Omaha. After conferring with the mail agent, and inspecting the express car with its $40,000 mine payroll secured in a safe, he determined that he would ride unannounced as a passenger travelling to San Francisco on business. He carried a Chicago newspaper as a prop for the portrayed business purpose of his trip.

An attractive young lady, two seats up, had been observing the little girl's conversation. She had smiled at Garrett before turning her attention to the scattered trees and rolling foothills as the train rocked and rolled through the beautiful wilderness. Garrett nodded an acknowledgement to the lady's smile, recalling that she had introduced herself as"Miss Jefferson, a teacher," travelling to Salt Lake to take a new job. His calm friendly demeanor and business man's appearance belied a man ready for action. Hidden under his wool coat, he carried a six shot Colt 38 caliber pocket pistol, in a custom made shoulder holster, with a derringer holstered in his right boot, and a Bowie style knife in his left boot, both covered by loose fitting trouser legs. A Henry lever action 15 shot repeater was stowed with his bag in a luggage compartment of the rail car.

The little girl, guided by her mother, beamed proudly, having manipulated the string on her fingers to create the desired crisscross pattern. Garrett rose casually and strolled to the front of the car and then back through the second passenger car to the express car. To fellow train riders, he appeared to be taking a stroll to stretch his legs. In reality, he was checking all the passengers looking for signs to identify an accomplice who was sometimes placed on a train to create a distraction at the time and place that the robbery was planned.

Upon reaching the express car, Garrett knocked at the door using the prearranged signal. Over the clacking of the train's wheels, he heard the timber bar slide away and saw upper half door open. The express agent who rode within the locked car peered out.

"Howdy, Jake."

"Afternoon, Mr. Tolliver. See anything suspicious?"

"Nope. Checked passengers. Several boarded back at Laramie, but no obvious confederate. If trouble's coming, it'll likely be on this last leg, before we come out of the mountains and into the valley by Salt Lake,"

* * *

Four men sat on horses looking down the ridge towards the curved track below. A quail whistled its distinct "bob white" call in the distance, saddle leather squeaked and a horse stomped its foot sensing the anticipation of its rider. One man coughed and then spat phlegm to the ground. Their leader, Jedidiah, gruff looking and trail dusty with two days of beard growth surrounding a ragged handle-bar mustache, glanced at the sun's high position and then down at the rounded shadows under their horses, taking one last drag on his rolled cigarette. He squeezed the stub of his smoke in his gloved right hand, while his left hand held the reins between his thumb and palm, having lost the fingers of his left hand years ago fighting an Indian with a tomahawk.

"Lets git down there. Train's due by within the hour. Got ourselves a mine payroll to pick up," said Jedidiah, glancing again at the sun."You got the powder, Pate?"

"Yep, powder, fuse, lights." Pate coughed and spit once again, as the horses trailed in line down the steep hill behind Jedidiah.

In the distance, a smoke trail from the train was now visible, heading towards the narrow draw below. Upon reaching the track area, the men set up near an old tree that stood near the tracks.

"Pack half of the powder there, at the base, away from the track," Jedidiah growled pointing with his stubby left hand towards a gnarled old tree, an ancient Douglas Fir. The old tree leaned precariously towards the track, scarred by a burnt gash of a recent lightning strike. It needed just a slight nudge to tip the old tree across the tracks to block passage of the train."Run the fuse to that gully, and wait there for my signal. You other two hide in the trees over there."

The bellow of smoke and blow of the steam engine could be heard from behind the steep hill as the train approached the narrow draw where the robbers had set up their operation. The ground trembled, the horses shook their heads and snorted nervously as the rumbling iron monster neared. Smoke was seen through the tops of the trees, and then the train rounded the curve approaching the old tipping fir. Jedidiah waved his kerchief and Pate lit the fuse.

The train rumbled on belching its steam and smoke, closer towards the ancient fir. Horses stomped and trembled, their riders tightly pulling back on the reins to control the scared animals. Closer . . . closer . . . 

BOOM!

Dirt and bits of grass and bark and wood chips showered the area and rained upon the waiting robbers. Slowly, the old fir tipped over to a horizontal position leaning from the hillside over the tracks like a gate. A smokey gray and dusty tan cloud rose from the base of the tree. A small flame was seen in the dry brush on the uphill side of the gaping hole where the finger like roots now reached skyward.

Wheels screeched as the engineer tried to bring the train to a stop. It was clear that impact with the tree would damage the train's boiler and chimney. The engineer was able to bring the train to a stop within 10 feet of the ancient tree now blocking its path.

* * *

Inside the train, women shrieked in fear, and the little girl fell into the aisle and began crying. Garrett recognized immediately that the explosion created blockage or track damage requiring an emergency stop by the engineer. Before the train had fully stopped, he was on his feet, holding on to the seat backs as he worked his way to the door. As he reached the doorway, he was met by the barrel of a Winchester 73. With the gun barrel in his face, Garrett stepped back into the passenger car holding his hands at his waist, palms open and forward, suggesting to the intruder that he was not armed.

"This is a hold up" the robber growled. Then he gestured to Garrett,"you, Mr. Do Gooder, don't pay no mind to what's goin' on outside. You take this hat and you hep me relieve these folks of money, jewelry, and guns."

Garrett eyed the man coldly, then held the front of his wool coat open slightly to show that there was no gun belt at his waist, while keeping the pistol in its shoulder holster still hidden under his coat. He accepted the hat and turned slowly down the aisle gesturing to individuals to place valuables into the hat. He could hear the robber's feet shuffle behind him and feel the barrel of the Winchester, as it moved from side to side as an encouragement to the riders to give up their belongings.

"Its . . . its all I have, my life savings . . . " cried Miss Jefferson, the teacher, tears streaming down her cheeks, when Garret stood before her holding the hat.

"Put it in there lady, or this rifle comes along that pretty face of yourn," threatened the robber.

Garrett nodded to the teacher to encourage her compliance. The little girl was crying as her mother and father dropped belongings into the hat. As they reached the back of the car, Garrett could see into the car behind that another robber was doing the same thing there as well. Outside, Garrett heard a shot and then a voice calling that the engineer had been hit. The women in the car began crying again. Garrett turned and faced the robber holding the hat so that the valuables could be seen between them. The man's eyes went down to the valuables, and he reached with his right hand to grasp a gold pocket watch that lay on top of the items.

Just then, Garrett dropped the hat between them, his right had grabbed the Winchester, and a left handed upper cut slammed into the robber's jaw. The robber grunted and blood appeared at his lips as Garrett pulled the rifle from the man's grip, slammed the handle into his groin, and then used a left cross to down the man, leaving him unconscious at his feet. Garrett pulled the derringer from his boot and handed to the Chicago merchant.

"Here, its cocked, ready to fire. Watch him, shoot if he tries anything." Garrett stated with authority. The merchant nodded. Garrett turned to the other passengers," You others, stay inside here."

Just then, there was another explosion and the train shook. Women shrieked and men gasped. It was back by the express car, Garrett thought, they are trying to get to the safe. He used the commotion to exit on the opposite side and run along the track-bed to the back of the train.

At the back of the train, Garrett checked the Winchester for its load, and then patted the colt under his coat for reassurance. He lowered to his knees and slowly peered around the freight car at the end of the train, checking for where the robbers would be. A smoke cloud hung near the express car. One robber was attempting to tie a rope to the damaged but still closed sliding door while another sat on a horse with the rope wrapped around the saddle horn, apparently planning to pull the damaged door from its track. The engineer sat grimacing in pain on the ground near the tender, shot in the leg, while the fireman nervously attempted to comfort his friend.

There was something strange, about the robber on the horse. Garrett observed that this robber tended to favor his left arm or hand as if it were injured, relying entirely on his right hand. As a man whose life often depended on a quick assessment of individuals and the danger they presented, such observations were instinctive, lifesaving. The individual attempting tie the rope to the door struggled, following orders from the man on horseback. And, Garrett recalled, he had seen that there was another robber in the second passenger car.

The rope was now secure, and the horseman kicked his animal to pull. The rope became taught, there was a creaking sound as the wood and metal slides strained and weakened. In a moment, the blast weakened door would give under the pressure, Garrett had to act now.

BAM!

The Winchester exploded in his face and split as the barrel and the stock flew in two directions, leaving Garrett temporarily blinded, deaf, with his left hand feeling numb. The robbers froze, staring in surprise at the explosion by the rear of the train. The taut rope snapped, as the door gave way, causing the robbers to turn in the direction of the express car. The horse stumbled as the rope pulled the door to the ground.

Garrett recovered, drew his colt and fired at the horseman. He saw flashes of a quick series of shots, and felt a sting on his left arm. The horseman fell, and Garrett turned his aim at the gunman who had emerged from the second passenger car. Their eyes met and guns simultaneously spit flames. Garrett felt like he was kicked in the shoulder, spinning him around and onto the ground.

* * *

"Garrett . . . Garrett, you still with us?" Jake, the express agent knelt over Garrett with a look of concern.

"Wha . . . What happened?" Garrett looked up at blue sky and fluffy clouds, his hearing had returned.

"Why . . . Garrett, ya done saved the day," said Jake."Ya kilt one, other one's shot-up pretty bad, like to cry for his mother. The one you knocked out is tied up, and I got the one at the door. Your shooting saved the train and saved the payroll. We got to tend to that shoulder."

"The one on the horse, . . . did he make it? I've got to talk to him." Garrett grimaced in pain as he pulled himself up to a sitting position."Help me up."

Holding on to Jake's shoulder, Garrett stepped slowly over to where the robber with the stub hand lay moaning. Garrett looked down at the man, noting his left hand missing its fingers. His memory flashed back to an Indian skirmish on the plains years ago. He squinted his eyes, trying to focus a fuzzy image, now beginning to feel faint from his shoulder wound.

"Jed . . . Jed . . . is that you?"

"Gare? Is that you Garrett?" The wounded robber blinked his eyes open."Holy mother of God!"

"Jedidiah! Little brother, what are you doing here? Seems I'm always cleaning up your messes."

"Gare . . . Gare . . . promise me, will ya, It was gonna be one last score. Then I was gonna go straight . . . ." The front of his shirt now soaked in blood, the wounded robber, Jedidiah Tolliver coughed and spit up blood. Garrett was now kneeling next to his mortally wounded brother, who he hadn't seen in three years.

"Gare, promise . . . promise me ya tell Ma that I went straight . . . " He coughed once again and his eyes rolled back under his eyelids.

"I . . . I promise, little brother," Garrett whispered, tears running down his cheeks.

The End

Back to Top
Back to Home



The Legend of Buck and Hellhound
by Erik Atkisson

Private William "Buck" Brogan was one of the toughest Indian fighters I ever knew.

He'd taken to rangering at a tender age for reasons of which I was ignorant in the early years of our acquaintance, cause Buck weren't much for sharing or talking. He was more of the quiet sort. When other rangers were yapping and drinking around the campfire, Buck would clean and oil his firearms, watch the stars, and mostly grunt when asked questions.

But when it come to fighting, Good Lord, Buck was the very Devil hisself. Even a bit up there in years as he was, with wrinkles around his gray eyes and a little salt in his short, sandy hair, he could knock a screaming brave off a horse at five hundred yards with his rifle or take on a half dozen of 'em with his bare hands if it come to that. And a matter of fact it did on at least one occasion I recall, up near Little Robe Creek in '58.

As I learnt soon enough, though, Buck had a soft spot I'd of never figured for a man of his temperament. It tended to show when we'd ride into some dusty town or another on ranger business and see one of the local curs slinking by with a mangy tail between its legs. When that happened, why Buck would crack a faint smile, get off his horse, and coax it over in a soft voice. The next thing you know he'd be getting his face licked clean and feeding bits of hardtack to his new found friend. I'd never seen a man shower a canine with so much affection, or a canine shower so much affection on a man.

And whooeeee, Lord help the soul who mistreated a dog in Buck's presence. Didn't matter who he was or what his station in life. I once saw a sheriff's deputy kick a dog off his porch, and in the blink of an eye Buck had dragged that poor bugger into the street for the thrashing of a lifetime. We had to bail Buck out of jail for that one, which was irksome as it come out of personal funds we'd set aside for drinking and such.

Come a day when we'd chased some banditos from San Antone clear down to the Rio Grande, and on our way back we come across a dead she-mutt next to the road, with a sickly black pup whining beside her carcass. It weren't long for the world, far as I could tell, and none of us gave it much mind as we rode on by, as we was all kind of hardened to scenes of that sort. 'Cept for ole Buck. He picked that little feller up and cradled it in one of his big arms like it was his own long lost child. One of the men—I forget which—said something foolish about it, and next thing you know Buck had pistol-whipped him with his free hand, and that was the end of that.

And I'll be danged if Buck didn't nurse that pup back to health and into one of the finest grown dogs I'd ever seen, with a sleek black coat, white belly, thick head like a mastiff's, and muscles like a lion's. We sort of adopted him as our unofficial mascot and named him Hellhound, on account of that chilling howl of his, and pretty soon folks took to calling our ranger company The Hellhounds as well. All of which seemed to suit Buck just fine.

It proved to be a smart move, taking in that pup, cause Hellhound were every bit as tough an Indian fighter as Buck and a better tracker besides. He could sniff out a Comanche a mile away and wasn't above taking one on hisself now and then when the mood hit him. Got so's we had to be careful where we was shooting because you never knew in the thick of a fight when Hellhound might leap out of the brush and take a screaming brave down in his jaws.

Didn't take long for word to spread, and pretty soon the Comanches had their own name for Hellhound. I never could pronounce it right, but it translated something like Black-Dog-that-Kills. They'd come to believe that him and Dogheart—which is what they was calling Buck by then—was sort of like two halves of the same critter. One that vexed them something bad, like what the white whale done to that crazy Ahab feller in the stories.

One cold, gray day in the middle of winter, we rode down the camp of a Comanche gang somewhere along the Red River—braves from Chief Laughing Bear's tribe—thinking to surprise 'em. The Comanches was fierce fighters, but often lousy at guarding their own camps. This time proved to be an exception, cause they was lying in wait. We got attacked from all sides, and in the middle of that fracas one of the braves put an arrow in Hellhound's rump and he went down with a yelp.

Buck went crazy when he saw that and charged off in Hellhound's direction, blazing away with his revolvers, but a bunch of braves had thought this out ahead of time and had a big sack ready, which they threw over Hellhound and dragged him away. Buck managed to put a bullet through one of 'em and he fell, but Buck's horse took an arrow in the throat and fell too, pinning Buck beneath it.

By the time the dust had settled, we'd killed about a dozen of their men and they'd killed two of ours and made off with Hellhound to boot.

Poor Buck was beside hisself. Five of us had to hold him down while he roared and struggled, wanting to get on another horse and tear off after them Comanches, but we was in no shape for another fight and not inclined to lose our best Indian fighter to a fit of temporary insanity.

He eventually come to his senses, but the ride back to Austin was a sad affair. Hellhound had become a celebrity to a lot of Texas folk, and as word spread of what had happened to him and those two men, we rode through towns where folks was on the street a' waiting, women dabbing their eyes with hankies and men holding their hats over their hearts like it was a funeral.

By then, everyone figured Hellhound had been roasted on a spit to a lot of whooping and dancing around the Comanche campfires. I ain't ashamed to admit I did.

Turns out we was wrong. A few days later a Comanche brave come riding into Fort Worth under a flag of truce with word that Hellhound was their prisoner. They was willing to give him up if the Governor declared a permanent ceasefire against all Comanches in the State of Texas.

Well, the message got passed to the Governor all right, but he weren't having none of it—not for Hellhound or any other dog, including his own. We had to lock Buck up in a prison cell that night, after he threatened to drag the Governor out of his mansion and beat the tar out of him. I think he knew there weren't much the man could do. He just needed something to vent his spleen on, and a politician's a tempting target for that sort of thing.

The next morning, after Buck swore an oath he'd not harm any lawfully elected officials, we let him out of his cell and gathered around him with a lot of kind words and consolation, like it was a wake for our old buddy Hellhound.

It were then that Buck started talking, and I swear he said more words in those few minutes than I'd heard come out of his mouth in all our previous years of rangering together.

"Boys, you know me," he said. "I ain't one for talkin' much, but I aim to talk a spell now, so listen up. Some of you's asked about my past and why I been a ranger all my life. Well, not that it was ever any of your danged business, but here's the short of it: When I was a boy up near San Saba, our little homestead got attacked one day by a gang of Comanches. My ma and pa tried to fight 'em off and took a few of 'em down, but they got kilt, too. The Comanches ransacked the place and some other homes and made off with a bunch of livestock and a few prisoners what were never seen again.

"You may be wonderin' how I survived. Well, truth is I almost didn't. In the thick of the fight I heard a whoop behind me and got hit upside the head with somethin' I never did see—a club or a tomahawk, I suppose. When I come to, I was being dragged into the thick bushes along the edge of our property. I thought it was one of them Comanches draggin' me away to finish me off or maybe take me as a prisoner.

"Weren't neither. It was our family mutt, Sam. He'd been hit, too, worse'n me, and was bleedin' bad. But with the last ounce of strength he had, he dragged me out of sight where them Injuns couldn't find me.

"I blacked out again, and the next thing I knowed there was some rangers leanin' over me, checkin' to see if I was still alive. Sam was layin' next to me, cold and stiff. They'd found his body on top of mine, like he was tryin' to hide or protect me.

"Now I know there's a lot of you what think I'm crazy, the way I treat dogs, and that a dog's life ain't worth no more'n a pig's or a bird's or what have you. But any man who talks that kind of nonsense ain't knowed a dog like I have. Sam was the best friend I ever had in them years, and he had more courage, decency, and honor than most human beings I've ever met.

"Now Hellhound, he's just like Sam, 'cept bigger and tougher. He's been a loyal friend to me and this company, and I can't abandon him to a cruel fate any more'n Sam could've abandoned me that day when my family was kilt. That dog is all the kin I got left in this world now, and I'll be damned if I'm gonna give him up without one helluva fight."

Well, I'll tell you what. That was one bunch of tough hombres gathered there listening to Buck's story, every one of 'em hardened by their own share of death and misery and all the other things that can beat a man's spirit down to where he don't believe in much of anything no more. But more'n a few of 'em was wiping their eyes and sniffling now like they'd come down with something in just the few minutes Buck was talking.

"Now, I'm takin' my firearms," said Buck, "I'm gonna saddle up the first horse I see, and I'm ridin' north with the winds of Hell at my back. I don't expect none of you to come with me, and I won't think the worse of you if you don't.

"That's all I got to say. Goodbye."

Well, Buck rode north all right, and a company of Hell-bent rangers rode with him. Word must of gone out on the telegraph wires, cause as we passed through towns like Belton, Waco, and Waxahachie, our numbers swelled and multiplied with other men riding horses and toting rifles till there was more'n a couple hundred of us setting up a giant cloud of dust in our wake the likes of which ain't been seen in Texas before or since.

Our scouts up north had a pretty good idea of where Laughing Bear's tribe had set up, out in the Llano Estacado, and a few days later our reconnoitering confirmed it. Thing was, in spite of our enthusiasm to go in guns a blazing, cooler heads prevailed and we agreed to a plan Buck hisself had thought up during the ride.

That night, he wandered into Laughing Bear's camp with his hands up, catching most of the braves by surprise and causing a wild whooping and hollering we could hear from the edge of the canyon where we was watching the whole thing through our spyglasses, thanks to the light of their campfires.

"I come to talk," said Buck, once the braves had shoved him to his knees in front of Laughing Bear, who was sitting on a rock in the center of the camp surrounded by the rest of his tribe—men, women, and children alike. Nearby was poor Hellhound, with one end of a thick rope around his neck and the other tied to a sturdy pole in the ground, giving him room to run in circles while the tribe taunted him, poked him with sticks, and such. This had been going on a few days straight, and Hellhound didn't look too well fed, neither. About the only considerate thing they'd done was pull their arrow out of his rear end.

"You're a brave man to come here, Dogheart," said Laughing Bear. "Do you bring an answer from your governor?"

"Nah," said Buck. "That sad sack couldn't of cared less about your demands, so I come on my own to tell you as much and to offer myself instead. You let Hellhound go and take me, and you can do what you think is right from there."

You might suppose that would've set the chief to laughing, given his name and all, but it seemed to have the opposite effect. Laughing Bear looked kind of impressed by the offer and said nothing. But the younger, more foolish braves around him set up a hue and cry in their tongue, shaking their spears and tomahawks and pointing 'em at Buck and Hellhound.

Buck didn't speak no Comanche, but he could figure what they was saying and thinking well enough. Why make a trade when they had Dogheart and Black-Dog-that-Kills and could get rid of both of 'em in one fell swoop?

"I didn't want to get this parlay off on the wrong foot by sayin' it," said Buck then, "but there's a small army of riled-up and well-armed Texans outside this canyon just waitin' for an excuse to come down here and engage in some serious target practice."

Well, that raised the tribe's dander even more, and I reckon you could hear their curses and war whoops from ten miles away just then, some of 'em even sprinting toward their horses, until Laughing Bear raised his hand and everyone went quiet.

"Why offer yourself to us, Dogheart, if you have an army with you? Why not just take Black-Dog-that-Kills by force?"

Buck spat. "Chief, you and I both know if it come to that, there's no tellin' who'll die and who won't. I don't want no more harm to come to Hellhound, and I don't figure any women or children need to die on account of this dispute, neither. If killin' one of us will settle the score for all the braves me and Hellhound sent to the Great Spirit, then I'll pay the price alone, since I'm the one what got him into this mess. I ain't found much satisfaction in the revenge business myself, and I been in it 'bout as long as you have, I reckon."

There was a long silence then, as Laughing Bear thought on his words and the braves looked from one to the other trying to figure whether there'd be a fight or not.

"And what proof do you have of this army, Dogheart?"

Buck turned in our direction then, put two fingers in his mouth, and made that piercing whistle of his that could shatter the windows out of a saloon. We lowered our spyglasses and nodded to the men on our left and right.

One by one torches flared up and down the line, till the canyon was darn near circled in a ring of fire.

This had a sobering effect on the Comanches.

Laughing Bear sighed and waved his hand. "Release them," he said, though truth to tell I don't think he was too sorry about it. And this time, none of his braves put up much of a hue and cry, neither. They cut Hellhound's rope and let him go.

Now, you might think Hellhound would've had a mind to nip a few of them Comanches straight away, for mistreating him and such, but instead he come bounding over to Buck, put his forepaws on Buck's shoulders, and started licking his face with that big fat tongue of his, while Buck scratched him behind the ears and gave him a hearty pat. The two of 'em turned their backs on Laughing Bear, and the Comanches parted to let Buck and Hellhound go. I swear, the way I could see it through my spyglass, they looked like any other man and his dog out on an evening stroll, Hellhound wagging his tail and running circles around Buck, in spite of the limp he had on account of that arrow.

Once the two of 'em had rejoined our ranks, there was more'n a few hotheads who wanted to swoop down on Laughing Bear's camp and finish this business for good, but Buck wouldn't have none of that. It was a matter of honor, he said, and even though our posse didn't all agree on that point, there wasn't a single ranger present who didn't side with Buck. That took the wind out of any fighting talk, and at any rate most everyone was happy we'd gotten Hellhound back and hadn't lost a soul.

So we treated Hellhound's wounds, left that canyon behind, and headed east, but when it come time to turn south to Austin, we was caught by surprise when Buck stopped and said he weren't going with us.

"Sorry, boys, but my rangerin' days are over. That ole' homestead I told you about, the one used to belong to my family—fact is, I still own it. Got some money set aside and I aim to fix the place up right, maybe get into the cattle business like my daddy dreamed of doin'."

Losing one of our best rangers to retirement weren't exactly the outcome we had reckoned on, but it was clear Buck had made up his mind, and too many of us sported old lumps on our heads to want to cross Buck Brogan when he'd set himself on a course of action.

"It's been a honor to serve with you boys. Ain't a company of rangers I ever rode with what I wouldn't trade for this one."

And with that, Buck turned his horse toward San Saba with Hellhound draped over the saddle in front of him, tongue lolling out and a big ole grin on his face as we watched 'em go. I got a gnat or something in my eye right then and had to turn away.

The End

Back to Top
Back to Home



Stick 'em Up
by Dave Harourt

Four horsemen dismounted and sauntered into the Aces High saloon and ordered a bottle of 'Forty Rod' and coffee all around. It was 8:30 AM. They flopped into chairs and poured a little 'sweetener' in their coffee. They didn't look like cowboys but not like any other identifiable occupation either. Three of them were young tall and rail thin, one was thicker and older. Thompson was wearing a shoulder holster under his coat. Neither Dixon nor Willard were heeled. Neither Yates or Thompson had tied down six shooters like gunfighters. Nor were they flashy dressed, no conches, big shiny belt buckles, fancy boots or pearl handle guns. They were all very plain looking bunch of men, nothing stood out.

* * *

There were five cowboys playing a slow quiet poker game. It looked like they had played all night. A couple of near empty whiskey bottles sat on the table. They were at the other end of the saloon and out of earshot.

* * *

"So yer saying cowpokes is stupid?" Dixon continued the conversation they were having as they rode in.

"Not exactly, I am saying that for the most part cowboys are ignorant. That's different than stupid. Do you know the difference?" Yates squinted as he asked.

"I suppose yer busting to tell me."

"Ignorant means not educated and stupid means incapable of learning. Why would an educated man ride hard all day, sleep on the ground, never get clean then get the worst pay of anyone."

"What I'm trying to figure is whether Yates is 'wiser than a tree full of owls' or just got you buffaloed," said Thompson.

"He sure as hell proved smart enough so far for me. Three banks, five stages and no law even got close," said Willard the older of the four.

* * *

"Well boys lets go over things for the last time." Yates looked at each one and said, "It is the same routine as last time. Willard will head out before we start, he will set up the ambuscade about a mile out in that grove of trees. Dixon goes next out to to that big rock about 400 yards.

"Thompson and I will tie off in front of the bank, we do our job and ride out. Dixon gives us room to run and Willard drops their horses. Dixon don't leave until Thompson and I are clear of Willard's location. The first change of horses is at the Sandoval ranch. They will be saddled and ready, just hop on and ride for the river."

"How far to the river?" asked Willard.

"Our horses and pack outfits are at the river which is about 80 miles from here and 50 miles from Sandoval's ranch Our horses are with those sheep herders. They promised to have everything ready to go at four exactly. I gave my watch to the old one so he better be on time," said Yates.


"It's a hell of a long way to Guymas," said Willard, " I'm thinking we earned a little rest before then."

"Let's argue that on the other side. Right now we have work to do," interrupted Yates.

"Willard it's a quarter of nine, time to go," said Yates. Willard arose, walked out, mounted up and rode south.

"We'll make Tucson a little poorer," said Dixon as he stood.

"Stay on your toes Dix, some fool may try to collect that $500 reward on your hide."

"Hell, they would pass on me and go for you or Thompson. Even cowboys can cipher enough to know $2000 is bigger than $500."

"Get going ya 'blatherskite', it's five minutes to nine now," said Thompson. Dixon walked out, mounted up and rode south.

* * *

The Poker game broke up and two cowboys staggered toward the front door. Three went to the bar.

The bartender carried the coffee pot to the table and said, "How about a little more to warm it up?"

All hell broke loose!

The bartender dumped the coffee in Thompson's lap. One of the poker players at the bar stuck a pistol in Yates ear. The two weaving for the door grabbed Thompson, one on each arm dragged him to the floor backwards in his chair. They each had pigging strings and had Thompson tied hand and foot in about 6 seconds. One in the style of a rodeo roper threw up his hands and hollered, "Did you see that judge?" he laughed out loud. "'Bloody Bill' Thompson ready fer brandin!"

* * *

Yates attempted to draw his pistol and a cowboy knocked him 'galley west' with his.

* * *

Dixon started his horse south at a walk so as to not attract attention as Yates had taught him. Two cowboys pulled up one on either side of Dixon. They each had their pistols pulled and pointed at Dixon. One gave Dixon a grin and said," 'Deadly Dave' Dixon make a sudden move and you will be fitted for a 'six by two'."

* * *

Willard set his shooting tripod down, pulled the 'big fifty' and leaned it against a tree. He started to lead his horse away so the noise would not be too bad for him. He only got a few steps when two cowboys stepped out of the brush pointing six shooters. " 'Sarge' Willard please don't move, I don't want to shoot you," said one who looked like a teenager. Soon they had Willard searched and tied on his horse.

* * *

"It was a good roundup a real 'daisy'. No one in the 'bone orchard' and we got them all," said Blinky Noren, one of the cowboys.

Lefty Neinheuser said, "We put a spoke in their wheel. What I want to know is where is all the dinero they stole?"

"Those horses have Sandoval's brand and Squint, 'Chony' and Jorge took off with the horses and talked about finding the horses that belong to the owl hoots," said Shaggy McDougal. "Why do they call Yates 'the Professor' ?"

"He was some sort of college teacher before he went bad, " said Blinky, I guess he is just a big 'flannel mouth'."

"I don't have a 'tail feather' left, can't even buy you boys a little 'coffin varnish'," said Lefty. "Reckon I could get a little credit here?"

"The banker across the street offer to loan us money until the rewards get here, he is plumb tickled with us cowpunchers for 'stomping his snakes' for him."

"That's as 'fine as cream gravy'. Let's get a jug of Kentucky's finest and live high on the hog for a spell," said Lefty.

"We get 'Tangle footed' on 'tarantula juice', we could put the 'whole kit and caboodle' 'up the spout'. We ride night herd on those 'owl hoots' so we best walk the straight and narrow."

"Well get some 'Arbuckle's' and let's square up."

* * *

Two days later all nine of the cowboys were together again. Squint and Chony were the acknowledged leaders. "The sheriff and his deputy are counting the money now," said Chony. "The deputy said there is some reward on the return of the loot so we get more than just the bounty on those scalawags.

"Looks likely that the total sum could be 8 or 9000 dollars, " said Squint.

"That's a lot of 'ballast', " said Lefty.

"That's near $900 fer each, ifen we give the bar dog about a months pay fer starting the ball," said Blinky.

"I ain't never had that much money in my life," said Lefty.

Jorge spoke for the first time, "We get their horses, how do we divide them? Mine is about crow bait, so I want one of them."

"Let's not divide them, let's keep them as common property we are in fine shape we have $2384 left from moving that herd to Montana. All we need to start a maverick roundup is a chuck wagon and a biscuit shooter."

"Get a biscuit roller who can make 'bear sign' and your aces with me," said Lefty.

* * *

They had contracted to take a herd of 2500 mixed long horns from San Antonio, Texas. to Roundup, Montana. The fee was $3000 for the nine cowboys as a group. They as a group had agreed to a plan to pool their money, use it to live on and gather another herd from the unclaimed thousands of cattle that roamed southern Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. They had an agreement with a Scottish rancher in Montana for 2500 head. That would earn them almost $30000. They had ranch plans of their own.

This plan was brutal work. Each cow and bull had to be heel and horn roped thrown and branded. This was not like calf branding. It took two ropers and strong horses. They then decided that they could hire some Vaqueros and brush poppers to help gather the herds since they now had money. They could take two herds to Montana. After a few more minutes of discussion they had their plan all worked out. They all shook hands to seal the deal"

"Those owl hoots sure are ignorant, we will get more out of this deal than they would have, and people's saying we are hero's."

"Why would an educated man ride hard day and night, sleep on the ground, never get clean, then go to jail for all his efforts? No they are stupid, Yates taught me the difference when we was night herding those 'mudsills' and what they did was stupid."

The End

Back to Top
Back to Home



U. S. Marshal
by Alvin W. McCarty

U.S. Marshal Mike Bell was astride his big appaloosa morgan mix gelding. Mike had named the strong horse, Buck. He had trained the horse well and Buck acted like a big dog. The marshal was also leading a pack mule. There was trouble in Tonto Basin and he was needed without delay.

Mike was dressed in well-tanned buckskin. This was how he got the nickname "Buckskin Mike". He was wearing a coat, that he had received from an old Sioux Indian. The coat was made from buffalo hide and he was sporting dark leather chaps.

The dark black and grey clouds were coming in from the northwest and the temperature had dropped ten degrees or so in the last hour. The chilled wind was blowing strong from the North. "Well, Buck," he said, "It's gonna snow soon, so we oughta find shelter. I know just the place." They had been riding on the back side of a long hog back. He turned Buck to the right and went up and over and then down the other side to the sandy wash at the bottom. He turned up the wash, put his heels to the horse's flanks, and trotted along the arroyo. It began to snow big, soft, wet flakes.

Two miles further along, he smelled wood smoke and came to old Pete Maxwell's ranch. "Pete!" he yelled out. Mike had stopped Buck twenty feet from the door but stayed in the saddle. This was the proper etiquette at that time. Pete came out from behind the wood pile holding a shotgun. The front door swung open and Pete's new Indian wife, Sue, stood there with a shotgun of her own. A young man, Jake, that looked about seventeen, came out from behind a tree. He carried a Winchester rifle.

"Hey Pete, it is me Buckskin Mike, what the Hell is going on here?" Mike asked.

"Let's go in and get some coffee," Pete responded.

* * *

It was snowing harder and had turned colder. Jake took Buck by the reins and led the big horse to the barn for care. We all headed to the house. "Apaches," the old man began. "I was getting water for Sue when I saw this lone horseman on the west ridge. I made it out 400 to 450 yards. My boy Jake, was with me, has eyes like a hawk, said it was an Apache, who wore a black shirt and rode a black horse. The Apache sat there for maybe fifteen minutes, and then he took off to the north".

"Do you think he would double back?" Mike asked.

"No" replied Sue. "He will go to San Carlos to get out of the storm. He has friends there."

Mike noticed the large amount of food Sue was cooking. "Why all the grub, Sue?" he asked.

"Old Wolf will be here soon," replied Sue.

Seeing the confused look on Mike's face, Pete grinned. "Sue is a Medicine Woman. She has the gift to see things and know things that will happen. She is the reason we don't have Apache trouble," Pete said.

The door swung open and Jake came in. His hat and coat were covered in snow. "Pretty soon you won't be able to see the house," he said.

"We better bring in wood and water. Old Wolf will be here soon," was Sue's response.

The men bundled up and went out to do the chores. As the men were finishing their task, they heard a yell from the arroyo. Pete quickly stepped into the house, grabbed his shotgun, and went outside. He fired two shots into the air. Sue came out of the house and handed Mike a lantern. Soon, two ghostly figures came slowly into view. Old Wolf had someone with him. Both men were wounded and needed help to get down from their saddles.

"Black Crow shoot us," whispered Tom. It was Tom, Old Wolf's son. Mike and Jake took their horses to the barn for shelter and care. When they started back, they had a hard time seeing the house through the whiteout conditions.

While Mike and Jake were in the barn, Sue cleaned and dressed the Indians' wounds. They were not serious injuries. She then gave each man a hand-woven blanket to stay warm and a bowl of hot and spicy chili con carne, which they devoured like a pack of wolves, along with lots of hot black coffee and sugar. Mike and Jake returned and joined the feast. In between gulps, Mike asked, "Who is Black Crow?" Old Wolf took a big sip of coffee and began his story.

* * *

"Black Crow is a young man of twenty summers. He went to the school in Phoenix. He is very smart in White Man's ways. He is loco in the head. He is crazy. He tells The People he is God. He says he will raise the dead and drive out the White Man. He will take anything or any woman he wants.

"Early this morning, he rode into the village. He went to the lodge of Two Pony and tried to take the eldest daughter, Bright Star. Bright Star was trying to fight him off. Two Pony jumped in to protect his only daughter. Black Crow pulled his knife and stabbed Two Pony and cut Bright Star. Both were alive when he left.

"Tom and I tracked him until the wind and snow wiped out any sign. We were on our way back, rounding a bend in the trail and ran into Black Crow and two renegades he had with him." Old Wolf paused, head down as if picturing the scene.

Tom took over the story as his father was getting tired. "Now, I can tell you things were hot and heavy. Many shots fired in short time. Bullet hit rock near Father's face. Many cuts. Much blood. I catch bullet in leg. It go through. Not too bad. Hit one renegade in shoulder. All I see. Big storm come quick," Tom continued. "Get very cold. Much snow up high. Maybe we go to God? Father sing Death Song. Die soon, I think."

* * *

While Tom was telling his story, Sue was seated in her rocking chair with her eyes closed. Pete said in a quiet voice, "She is having a vision. Please don't talk."

In a short time, Sue said in a whisper, "Old Wolf will see Sun Spirit soon".

* * *

Old Wolf was sitting quietly, eyes closed as the men sat around the fireplace smoking. Mike started talking.

"Boys, I was headed for Tonto Basin, but we have to stop Black Crow. You were right, Tom. He is just plain loco."

"Dog Town," said Sue.

Mike looked at Sue and acknowledged her. He then said "If we don't have more than two feet of snow on the ground, we should be able to make San Carlos tomorrow. Tom, will you come with me? You are the one who knows what Black Crow looks like."

It was an hour before sun up as the two men rode out of the ranch yard. Each man was leading a spare horse. Sue had filled their saddle bags with supplies. Taking the trail for San Carlos, neither man spoke for a long time. With only about two feet of snow, they had made good time. "We'll stop at the bottom of Butcher Pass and change the horses," said Mike as he stretched his back, legs, arms and shoulders.

Tom grinned at Mike and said, "Getting a bit old for this kind of work?"

Mike just shook his head.

As they climbed the pass, the snow got deeper. The horses were laboring hard. At the summit, the wind had scoured most of the snow away. Now it was only a foot deep on the San Carlos side of the mountains.

* * *

It was a little after twelve when they rode into the main courtyard at San Carlos. They dismounted and went into the Indian Agent's office. The man was a smart and honest fellow named Dave Wade. After pleasantries were exchanged, Mike and Tom told the entire Black Crow story. While the men were talking, Big Nose, the head of Apache scouts, came to the door and Dave waved him in. Big Nose, like most Apaches, was a small man weighing 110 pounds or so and standing about five foot five. By the look on the Indian's face, they knew there was big trouble ahead.

Big Nose spoke in Apache and Dave translated. Big Nose had a spy in Dog Town who hated Black Crow and kept the scout informed of what was going on. The spy had been in touch earlier that day. He reported that Black Crow and eleven warriors were going to attack the White Mountain tribe when the sun touches Elk Peak. He must be stopped!

* * *

Big Nose was able to round up three old warriors and two teenage boys. Dave wrote a note to the small army post that was four miles upriver and sent the youngest boy to make the delivery to the post. He gave the older boy verbal instructions and sent him to the White Mountain camp. Mike called his small posse together to deputize them. The group of seven men rode out of San Carlos heading for Dog Town. They were very well armed.

Mike rode relaxed and easy in the saddle. Dave could not hide the tension in his face. Tom and Big Nose appeared unconcerned, but their eyes were always moving. At the back of the posse, three old warriors were laughing and joking. For them, today was a good day to die. Soon they would go over the sun. They would die as warriors not old men. "Ya-ta-hay Sun Spirit!" they exclaimed. Then they sang their Death Songs.

* * *

Stopping half a mile from Dog Town the men had the wind in their face so the dogs wouldn't smell them approaching. Mike handed his binoculars to Big Nose and sent him to scout up ahead. Big Nose returned quickly. He drew the village plan in the dirt. The diagram showed where the wickiups were and where the warriors were gathered. A group of young braves were resting with only two guns showing and were bragging about their heroism in the coming fight. The renegades had their wickieup on the other side of the village and had one rifle showing.

Mike silently pointed to where the young warriors were. He then pointed to Dave and the three old warriors. The old men just smiled. Mike then pointed to himself, then Tom and Big Nose. He pointed to the location of the two renegades. The two Indians nodded their understanding. The posse mounted. Mike whispered, "No shooting women or children and no yelling until I do. We want to get close." At one hundred yards, Mike gave out a mighty whoop and the posse charged. Shots were fired, dust flew!

It was a total surprise. The young Indian braves just sat there with startled looks on their faces. That was all the time the posse needed to be in the middle of the young warriors, their Colt revolvers speaking a deadly message to the young men.

When the dust and smoke cleared, seven young warriors lay dead or dying. Two of the old warriors lay dead on the ground. The third warrior was dying still seated in his saddle slumped over the pommel. Dave, who was unhurt, rushed to his side. The old warrior looked at Dave and said in a weak voice, "Tell our People the brothers died as warriors." He then fell from the saddle dead. There had been five guns, not two.

* * *

Mike, Tom and Big Nose had no trouble with the renegades. The fight had lasted maybe 20 seconds. The renegades had been drinking since noon and were drunk. It was over! The renegades were dead! But where was Black Crow?

Mike caught sight of an Indian dressed in a black shirt mounting a black horse and riding hard away. Mike turned Buck to follow and said to the big horse, "Catch 'em Buck!" Black Crow turned in the saddle and emptied his six-gun with wild shots. Black Crow's horse was no match for Buck, now just feet behind the Indian's black horse. Black Crow, who was looking down trying to reload the revolver, never saw the limb that hit him in the neck. He did a back flip out of the saddle and landed head first in a bed of large rocks. He was dead when Mike got to him. His neck was broken.

Soon, the army rode onto the scene. There was a sergeant and ten troopers. "Well Marshal, looks like we missed the party. I see you got that crazy Indian. Things will be much better with him gone. If you don't mind, we will take it from here," said the sergeant.

* * *

The four men returned to San Carlos. Marshal Mike and Dave completed the paper work. Tom and Big Nose could not help with the writing of reports and went off to cohort with the other Indians.

Mike enjoyed a home cooked meal at Dave's house and spent the night. It was two hours after sun up when Tom came dragging in looking worse for the wear. It took an hour to get saddled and packed and on the trail back to Pete's ranch. The sun was just setting as they pulled into the yard. Pete met them at the barn. As the men put away the horses, Pete filled them in on what happened at the ranch while they were gone. "Old Wolf died an hour after you two left. Jake and I rolled him in a blanket and tied him on his horse. Sue took him home."

Mike turned to the west and watched as the sun dropped below the ridge line. He took a deep breath, let it out slowly, and smiled. He thought he heard a wolf howling in the distance.

The End

Back to Top
Back to Home