Conagher (1969) (2 page)

Read Conagher (1969) Online

Authors: Louis L'amour

BOOK: Conagher (1969)
5.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

WHEN Jacob Teale had bee n gone three weeks the stage cam e by the Teale cabin.

Ruthie saw it first. She was up on th e slope gathering chips for kindling whe n she saw the dust far away up the valley.

For a moment she stared, then , dropping the chips, she ran for the house , calling out , Ma! Ma! Somebody's corning !

Evie put down her dishcloth and, dryin g her hands on her apron, she went to th e door. Laban came running from th e corral, where he was in the process o f building a crude shelter of brush for th e three horses and the milk cow they ha d brought from Missouri, led behind th e wagon.

Shading their eyes, they saw the stag e coming, galloping horses obscured by th e accompanying cloud of dust, and the n suddenly the racing teams swung fro m the trail and came up the road into th e yard.

It was a Concord stage drawn by fou r horses, and two men rode the box. Inside , they could see two other men. The drive r pulled up and stared down at them.

Now where in the Lord's name di d you come from ?
he demanded.

I am Mrs. Jacob Teale , Evie replied , with dignity , and these are my children.

Won't you step down? You must be ver y hungry .

That we are
, the driver agreed.

Ma'am, this here gent is Beaver Sampson.

He's riding shotgun. He's ridin g against Injuns more than road agents.

The tall gentleman stepping down i s torn Wildy. He's superintendent of thi s stretch of stage line, God help him, an d you will recognize the uniform of the U
. S
.

Cavalry on the other feller. He's Cap'
n Hurley. I'm Charlie McCloud, and we'r e runnin' the first stage through to th e Plaza .

Come in, won't you ?
Evie said .
W
e weren't expecting company, but I am sur e we can find something. Laban, will yo u bring in an armful of wood? I'll make fres h coffee .
t orn Wildy glanced at the stone cabin , then at the corrals .
You will forgive ou r astonishment, Mrs. Teale. We were tol d there was no one in this area at all. Comin g upon your place is quite a surprise .

Sampson glanced from her to th e children .
Anybody tell you this wa s Injun country, ma'am ?

We haven't seen any. Of course, w e have stayed close to home. Just gone fo r wood, and all. Mr. Teale is away at th e momenthe has gone to the settlement s to buy cattle .

Teale? I haven't heard the name. No t that I know all the folks who com e through, but a man buying cattle . .. well , usually you hear about such things .

Evie led the way into the cabin .
We ar e not set up for company yet, gentlemen , but you're welcome .

Thank you
, Wildy said, seatin g himself and holding his hat on his knee.

Mrs. Teale, we'll be running a somewha t makeshift affair for a while, so I wonder i f you could take on the feeding o f passengers until we get our station s established? Your place here is just twent y miles from our last planned stop, and yo u could make yourself as well as th e company a bit of money. That's scarce, I presume .

Indeed it is, Mr. Wildy .
Sh e smoothed her apron self-consciously.

Yes, I could do that, but we would hav e to lay in supplies .

No problem. Mrs. Teale, you woul d be saving us a lot of trouble and expense i f you could handle this until we get settle d down. You make up a list of whatever yo u need and I'll have McCloud bring it on th e next stage ... at our expense. Th e company will foot the bill to get yo u started, in consideration of the favor yo u would be doing us. After that you wil l have to manage on your own profits .

That would be fine .

We will be having another stage sto p fifteen miles west, but you could save u s the expense of building for the tim e being .

He turned to Laban .
How are you wit h horses, son? Could you harness the team s and get them out for us until your pa get s home ?

Yes, sir. I help pa with the horses, sir.

I hitched up and drove when we came wes t from Missouri .
to You're from Missouri, then ?
Captai n Hurley said.

My husband is a Missourian, Captain.

I am from Ohio .

As she talked she was moving about , getting things ready. She was flushed an d excited. It was a pleasure to have visitors , and she enjoyed hearing them speak of th e common places of travel, of road conditions , the possibilities of rain, and th e grazing of stock.

You will be having neighbors to th e south , Hurley said .
Some big cattl e outfits are moving in about thirty mile s down the country .

It will be a pleasure. Will the stage s come often, Mr. Wildy ?

Not at first. Then they will come ever y other day. Two, sometimes three a wee k one going west, and another going east. I t will depend on the business .

She bustled about, getting food on th e table and refilling their cups.

Later, when they had eaten and wer e filing out to get aboard the stage, McClou d lingered .
Ma'am, you keep a sharp watc h out for Injuns. They ain't been troublesom e right now, but it can start any time , and there's always young bucks out fo r mischief.

Don't give 'em anything. If you do , they'll figure it's a sign of fear. Make 'e m trade. Any Injun understands trade an d they cotton to it, but they're notional, an d their thinkin' ain't like ours .

Thank you, Mr. McCloud. I wil l remember .

You say your man went to buy cattle ?

He was looking for breeding stock. W
e hope to raise a good herd and start sellin g in about three years .

If I see him, I'll tell him you're al l well .
McCloud touched the brim of hi s hat .
Be seein' you, ma'am .

They stood out in front of the cabin an d watched the stage until it disappeare d around the next curve of the road. The n Evie turned .
Come, children , she said.

We've got a lot to do .

All of them felt a new excitement.

Laban was puffed up with importanc e over his new job. He was to be a hostler, a t least until pa got home, and even after tha t if he could talk pa into letting him keep o n with itunder pa's supervision, of course.

At sunset Evie walked away from th e cabin and stood alone, her hair stirring a little in the faint breeze. She stood on th e edge of the trail, a hundred yards from th e cabin. All was very still.

She never tired of the mornings an d evenings here, the soft lights, the changin g colors of sunlight and cloud upon th e hills, the stirring of wind in the grass.

Out here there was no escaping the sky o r the plains, and Evie knew that until sh e came west she had never really know n distance.

The air was incredibly clear. Fresh an d cool as it was, one breathed it in lik e drinking cool water; and always there wa s a definite odor on it, the odor dependin g on the direction from which the win d blew: the smell of cedar, and of pine s beyond, the smell of sage, or, from th e dryer lands after a rain, the smell of th e creosote bush.

She looked down now at the tracks i n the road, the tracks of the passing stage , the first tracks in their road since Jaco b left.

Suddenly, she felt a chill. Superimpose d on the tracks of the stage were th e tracks of unshod ponies . . . Indian ponies!

When could they have passed? Ho w could she have missed seeing them?

It must have been at suppertime, whe n they were at the table. The stage had lef t shortly after noon, and they had worke d around the place, inside and out. Laba n had fed the stock . . . yes, it must hav e been at suppertime.

She walked a little way, studying th e tracks. There seemed to have been tw o horses, and at one point the riders ha d drawn up, facing toward the cabin , perhaps listening to them talking.

That was not over an hour ago. Sh e turned abruptly and, gathering her skirt , started for the cabin. Even now they migh t be up in the cedars, watching her. Sh e moved quickly.

Laban met her at the door, brushing ha y from his clothes. Ruthie was reading a newspape r one of the men had left with them.

What is it, ma? What's wrong ?
Laba n asked.

She hesitated for a moment, but the y must be told .
Indians, Laban. I saw thei r tracks in the road. They must have com e along while we were eating supper. W
e must be very careful .

That night she left a crack of th e window open looking toward the corrals , and she placed the shotgun beside her. I f the Indians came she supposed it would b e for the horses, but although the coyote s howled the long night through, she hear d no other sound.

Before it was time for the stage to com e again, she carefully tamped down th e earthern floor, and then, as she had see n her grandmother do years ago on thei r farm in Ohio, she traced a floral pattern o n the floor to resemble a carpet. She wa s pleased with the result.

When they were expecting the stage sh e put water on the fire and got food ready t o serve, and then they waited.

They heard the stage coming long befor e it arrived, heard the rattle of the wheels ove r stones, and the running horses.

Charlie McCloud was driving again , and a different man was riding shotgun.

He was a lean, round-shouldered ma n with a tough face and a hard-cut mouth.

He was sporting a cut on his cheekbon e and a black eye.

This here is Kiowa Staples , Charli e said .
It looks like he run into somethin g in the dark .

Staples threw him a hard glance .
I t was some no-account saddle bum , Staples said irritably .
I misjudged him.

The next time we meet it won't be fist s we'll use .

Aw, forget it Kiowa , Charlie said.

You brought it on yourself. There's som e men you just can't push, an' you pushe d that one too far. You think it over an' yo u won't blame him none .

I won't blame him , Staples replied , but I'll kill him .

There was one passenger, a portly ma n in a black derby and black suit wh o descended stiffly from the stage, stretched , and started toward the house.

My advice to you, Kiowa, is to leav e that gent alone , Charlie McClou d advised .
I've seen his kind before. Yo u don't find them swaggering aroun d hunting trouble, because they've see n trouble a-plenty. They've been u p the creek an' over the mountain , they've hunted buffalo an' they've fi t Injuns an' maybe outlaws, an' they'v e done it like you an' me hitch a tea m of hossesit's ever' day work to them.

You steer clear of that kind if you wan t to keep a whole hide . . . an' a reputation .

Together McCloud and Kiowa packe d the supplies in and placed them o n the floor out of the way, while Evie pu t the food on the table. It was good soli d food and all three men ate wit h relish.

Stays with you, that kind of grub , Charlie said .
If I wasn't married, Mr s Teale, I'd surely come a-courtin'
.

Evie blushed
.
Thank you, Mr.

McCloud. I've always liked to see a ma n enjoy his food .

Kiowa looked up at her .
No Injuns ?

We saw tracks
, Laban said , righ t after you folks left, the last time. Ther e were two of them .

They were scoutin' you , Kiowa said , and us. You keep a fresh eye, ma'am, an d you worry some. It'll likely be you r saving .

When they were gone, Evie and Ruthi e put the supplies away, while Laban wen t back to work on the shelter for th e animals. It was crudely built and scarcel y more than a windbreak, but Evie , watching him from a distance, saw that th e boy worked with some assurance and not a little skill. Evidently he had watched hi s father and others, and perhaps had helpe d at such jobs before.

Since his father had been gone Laba n had been getting up earlier and workin g harder, and he had fussed much less wit h Ruthie than before. His sister wa s mystified by the change. Laban seeme d suddenly grown up and far away from her.

He went about his work with grea t seriousness, and did not wait to be asked.

He did what needed doing, and Ruthie'
s respect grew despite herself. She foun d herself speaking to him as she might t o someone much older. At times it irked her , but Laban seemed not to notice; sometime s she deliberately teased him, hopin g to arouse his irritation, to make him wan t to fight back, but he assumed a loft y attitude and only smiled or, worse yet , ignored her.

In the week that passed the stag e stopped only twice, and then on the day i t was due to come again, three rider s appeared, driving a herd of horses, a i dozen of them to be left at the Teale place.

One of the cowhands was a youngster , not over seventeen, the others were olde r men. Johnny McGivern came gallopin g on ahead, yelling at Laban .
Open th e bars there, boy! We're a-bringin' in th e hosses !

Other books

Sphinx by Anne Garréta
Cowboy Undercover by Alice Sharpe
Double Coverage by Meghan Quinn
Spin Control by Holly O'Dell
9780981988238 by Leona Wisoker
The Magic Knot by Helen Scott Taylor