Curly Bill and Ringo (12 page)

BOOK: Curly Bill and Ringo
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“Yeah, I reckon it ain’t your day, Pike,” Curly said. “All you need now is for Hoodoo to show up.”

“If he does I’ll run him off with a shotgun,” Pike said. “But it wouldn’t surprise me none if he ain’t already on his way here now. When everything goes to hell, Hoodoo ain’t never far behind. It happens too much to be just a accident. Bad luck don’t foller him, it trots on ahead.”

“Pike, I’d like to jaw with you boys all day,” Curly said, “but we got work to do.”

Pike thought for a moment, his eyes darting about, weighing the odds. “Tell you what. You boys can cut out them cows we took from you and we’ll take the rest.”

Curly shook his head. “Can’t do it. You cost us a lot of time and work getting our cows back. We aim to keep yours to make up for our trouble.”

“I’ll see you in hell first!” Pike cried, his hand gripping the butt of his holstered gun. “You give us back them cows or I’ll put a bullet right between your eyes!”

“You ain’t that good a shot,” Curly told him. “And you ain’t near fast enough. Besides, you boys have got enough to worry about without getting me sore at you.”

“He’s right about that, Pike,” Bear Lefferts muttered.

“Yeah, I reckon he is,” Pike said, deciding to fight another day. He sat up straighter in the saddle and, if anything, his bearded face and black eyes became even more threatening. “All right, Curly, you win this time. But as soon as we git through with Ringo, we aim to settle with you.”

Curly smiled. “When Ringo gets through with you boys, there won’t be enough of you left for me to worry about.”

Pike shot him an evil look and jerked his horse around. The others followed suit and they rode off in a tight bunch, as if none of them wanted to bring up the rear.

“Let’s start them cows for Mexico before they change their minds,” Curly said. “Comanche Joe, you ride on ahead and let Badilla know we’re coming. If he ain’t got no cash I reckon we’ll have to trade for them horses he said he’d have ready. Hurry on back and be ready to give us a hand in case there’s trouble.”

Chapter 11

Badilla and his grinning cutthroats were waiting for them near the border with a small band of horses. Badilla himself never grinned, though he always gave the impression that he was hiding an evil smile. He was a tall bony Mexican in his late thirties or early forties. Like most of his men, he wore a big sombrero on his head and bandoliers crossed over his shoulders. In addition, he wore two cartridge belts about his lean waist and two long-barreled revolvers in tied-down holsters. Some of his men displayed four or five pistols each, besides their saddle guns. There were thirteen of them in all and they were a very hard-looking bunch.

Badilla looked the herd over and then said to Curly in English, “You already sell us these cows three times, gringo.”

Curly leaned a little forward in the saddle and glanced briefly at the herd, his big dark face without expression. “That means you’ve sold them to someone else three times,” he said.

Badilla spoke to his cronies in Spanish, telling them what Curly had said, and they laughed as if they thought it a pretty good joke. But Curly noticed that there was not even a hint of a smile on the bleak old face of Garcia, who was still a young man in years, and big and tough looking. He watched Curly in silence, open dislike and scorn in his smoldering dark eyes. He seemed to be Badilla’s right-hand man and probably had thoughts of replacing the lean wolfish leader of the pack.

Badilla kept watching Curly with his head turned to one side and he seemed to be smiling a little behind his long poker face. Finally he said, “This time I think we don’t pay you for them. No pesos, no dollars, no horses, no nothing.”

“We better talk about it,” Curly said.

“You talk,” Badilla said, and deliberately reached for his gun.

Curly drew his right-hand gun and cocked it before Badilla’s was out of the holster, proving that if necessary he could fight as well as talk.

Badilla looked at the gun in amazement and let his own slide back in the leather. “Ah, gringo,” he said, “you are very fast. I take off my hat to you.”

Curly knew that Badilla carried a derringer in the high crown of his sombrero. So he said, “You keep your hat on or I’ll blow your head off.”

Badilla went tense in a sudden black rage. But it was visible for only a moment before he had himself back under control and his feelings hidden behind his long hard face. He shrugged and said indifferently, “All right, gringo. We give you the horses and owe you for the rest. Pay you next time.”

Cash started to protest but Curly silenced him with a quick look and said to Badilla, “It’s a deal. You boys take them cows and get out of here.”

Badilla looked at him in that blank, deadly, almost smiling way and then spoke to his men and they wheeled their horses and moved off with the herd.

Curly pushed his hat back off his sweating forehead with the muzzle of his gun and sat his saddle looking after them for a minute. Then he holstered the gun and said, “Let’s get the hell out of here.”

“He won’t ever pay us the rest,” Cash said.

“Don’t be greedy,” Curly said. “We’ll be lucky if he lets us keep the horses and our hides.”

They headed for the canyon that led all the way to the Hatcher ranch. The canyon floor was almost level and during the summer rainy season it often seemed to Curly that the water ran uphill as much of the way as it ran downhill. But most of the year there was no water in the canyon, just sand and rocks and a few stunted shrubs.

They pushed the horses along the canyon at a fast trot and sometimes at a gallop. But it wasn’t long before they saw a cloud of dust behind them and it was a little closer each time they looked back.

“We can’t outrun them!” Cash yelled. His lean dark face was streaked with dust and sweat and there was an unusual excitement in his eyes. As a rule he stayed pretty calm no matter what happened. He reined alongside Curly, looking back over his shoulder. “They’ll kill their horses if they have to!”

“We could let them have this bunch back,” Curly said, nodding at the Mexican horses. “Then we could outrun them.”

“Are you crazy?” Cash asked as if shocked at the suggestion.

“Then I guess we’ll have to fight to keep them,” Curly said. “Hell, I reckon it’s about time we eliminated the middleman anyway. We’ll never get rich the way we’re going.” He glanced over his shoulder. “I reckon the same thought occurred to them.”

“You got a plan?” Cash asked.

Curly peered ahead through the dust and saw where some boulders had tumbled down from above, almost blocking the canyon. Some stunted shrubs grew among the rocks, making the spot even more ideal for what he had in mind.

“That looks like a good spot,” he said. “We’ll let the horses keep going and maybe Badilla will think we’re still with them.”

They herded the horses through the narrow gap past the old rock slide and then rode at them waving their hats and slapping at their rumps with coiled ropes. The horses broke into a gallop down the canyon and the dusty riders pulled back to the rocks, tied their mounts out of sight and took cover among the boulders near the bottom of the slide.

Curly took out his heavy .45’s one at a time and added a sixth cartridge in the chamber normally left empty as a safety precaution.

“You boys got plenty of ammunition?” he asked.

“Enough,” Cash said, sounding a little nervous. He was the only one who had a rifle, an old Henry. The other boys and Curly had only revolvers. Parson had his long double barrel shotgun. He was back behind the others, his black stovepipe hat sticking up above a rock, his beard muddy with sweat and dust.

Curly glanced around at him. “You better be careful with that scattergun, Parson. Back there, you’re liable to hit us.”

Parson’s mouth trembled when he spoke. “I ain’t never killed a man before, Curly. And I don’t know as I want to start now. Not to protect stock that don’t rightly belong to us.”

“Who does it belong to?”

“Uncle Willy,” Parson said, his eyes damp. “You boys stole them horses from him and sold them to them Mexicans. They sold them to somebody else and then stole them back again, just like we’ve been doing. How long do you think the Lord will let us ignore his commandments and get away with it? There’ll be a day of reckoning, mark my words.”

“So far he ain’t had much to say about it,” Curly said. “And I reckon if anyone stops us it won’t be him.”

“Them damn greasers,” Comanche Joe grunted, looking over his rock at the approaching dust. Curly noticed how much like a Comanche he looked, with his swarthy round face and shoulder-length black hair. He had his long-barreled Smith & Wesson gripped in his hand and looked out of place on the ground, squat and bowlegged like he was. He belonged on a horse.

Beanbelly was peering over another rock with an almost animal fear in his eyes. He had taken off his hat to make less of a target and his thinning dark hair was plastered to his skull with sweat. Curly noticed that he had already cocked his big Remington .44. No two of them had the same kind of guns. Cash had a Colt, but it was an old .44 rimfire that used the same cartridge as his Henry. A good gun, but the cartridge wasn’t very reliable.

“Don’t fire till I give the word,” Curly said. “We’ll wait till they’re so close even Beanbelly can’t miss.”

“That’s taking a chance,” Cash said. “They’re liable to ride right over us.”

“Not in these rocks,” Curly said.

“You mean you aim to start shooting without giving them no warning or anything?” Parson asked hoarsely.

“That’s right,” Curly said.

“But that’s murder!” Parson cried.

Curly frowned, “I call it self-defense. There’s thirteen of them and five of us. Our only chance is to even up the odds a little. And keep one thing in mind, Parson. We won’t be fighting to protect some stolen horses. We’ll be fighting to save our own skins.”

“Here they come,” Comanche Joe grunted, as the Mexicans rounded the bend in the canyon.

“Get down,” Curly said, “and stay out of sight till I give the word. Then give them everything you’ve got, but try to make your shots count. And make sure none of them don’t get past us no matter what happens, or we’ll catch it from both sides.”

They crouched behind the hot rocks with the sun beating down on them and the racket of the approaching horses swelling like thunder in their ears. The dark bandits were coming at a gallop and in a few more moments would be on top of them.

Curly was about to give the signal when Beanbelly stuck his head up and fired over his rock at the gaunt riders. It was a clean miss and the Mexicans all went for their guns.

“Now!” Curly yelled, and shot the nearest rider out of the saddle. He had hoped it was Badilla, but it was another tall Mexican.

Comanche Joe fired and killed a horse by mistake and muttered a curse as the horse tumbled, throwing its rider. Then Cash’s rifle spoke and his bullet jerked a big sombrero from a Mexican’s head, killing the Mexican.

The others didn’t swerve as Curly had expected, but galloped straight at the rocks, bent low over their horses’ necks and reeling crazily through the dust and smoke and sunlight.

Curly stood up blazing away with both guns and emptied two or three saddles. Cash’s rifle spoke again with deadly accuracy and Comanche Joe and Beanbelly were firing their pistols rapidly but without much effect. Then old Parson raised up with his shotgun and blasted a sinner into hell.

Badilla and five of his men wheeled their horses and galloped wildly for some rocks about a hundred yards away, near the mouth of a narrow side canyon. The others lay dead or dying on the ground and Cash emptied another saddle before they made it to the rocks.

“If you had to shoot somebody in the back,” Curly said, “why didn’t you make it Garcia?”

“Which one’s he?”

“That big heavyset young Mexican about my age.”

“Then he ain’t all that young,” Cash said. “But maybe I can still get him.”

“Hell, let them go,” Curly said, his dark face solemn. “Every coward deserves a chance to run.”

“They ain’t running,” Cash said. “They’re just trying to reach them rocks.”

Just as Badilla and his men reached the rocks, a tall man on a black horse came out of the side canyon and trotted slowly toward them, as if he was just out for a leisurely ride and minding his own business. Yet it was clear even from a distance that the five Mexicans saw something sinister and alarming in the sudden appearance of the black-garbed stranger on the sleek black horse. They sat their own scrawny nags with their heads turned sideways watching him with a kind of superstitious dread, and the little gesture one of them made crossing himself seemed to be the only movement in the frozen ominous hush that had settled in the canyon following the roar of guns and the thunder of galloping horses.

“It’s Ringo,” Curly said softly, holding his breath.

The tall Badilla suddenly turned his horse toward Ringo and whipped up his gun to fire at him. But before he could get off a shot, a gun roared in Ringo’s fist and the lanky Mexican reeled out of the saddle. From the ground he tried again to lift his gun, but a cough shook him and then he lay still.

The other Mexicans, stunned for a moment by their leader’s death, now went into a wild panic. To get away from Ringo, two of them galloped their horses straight back down the canyon toward Curly and the Hatchers. The other two started to follow them, then circled wide around the dark-garbed stranger and spurred their horses for the border.

The two coming down the canyon began firing when they were still about sixty yards off. But the distance narrowed rapidly and it was clear that they meant to ride past Curly and the Hatchers and get away down the canyon, where they might set up an ambush and pick them all off with their saddle guns.

“Cash,” Curly said.

Cash raised his Henry and knocked the nearest rider out of the saddle.

Then the rifle jammed and the other Mexican came on at a hard gallop, the curved brim of his big sombrero bent back by the wind, his teeth bared in a tense snarl. He saw Curly grinning at him and he leveled his gun at the big man. Curly quit grinning and flung up his own gun, blasting the Mexican off his horse. The riderless horse galloped on down the canyon.

“It’s a good thing you boys brought me along,” Curly said, reloading his pistols. “Or you’d soon be helping old Shorty feed the buzzards.”

“Ha!” Cash said.

“Only two got away and one of them had to be Garcia,” Curly said, looking off up the canyon. “Sooner or later he’ll cause me trouble. I can feel it in my bones.”

“What do you call this?” Cash asked. “It sure wasn’t no picnic.”

“He’ll blame me for it too. Seems like I get blamed for everything. But he seemed to hate my guts before this happened. I don’t know why. Maybe he just don’t like gringos.”

He finished loading his guns and watched Ringo ride up on his black horse. Ringo had holstered his own gun and still gave the impression that he was just out for a leisurely ride. He drew rein and sat his saddle watching the big rustler in an idle way. But Curly thought he saw the cold gleam of a smile in those clear blue eyes.

“You sure took your time getting here,” Curly said.

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