The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard - Elmore Leonard [120]
He ate alone at the counter, away from the crowded tables that squeezed close to each other in the hot, low-ceilinged café, taking his time and listening to the noise of the people eating and drinking. Emiliano served him, and after his meal set another beer—that was very cold—before him on the counter. And when he was again outside, the air seemed cooler and the dusk more restful.
He lighted a cigarette, inhaling deeply, and saw someone emerge from the alley that led to his adobe. The figure looked up and down the street, then ran directly toward him, shouting his name.
Now he recognized Agostino Reyes, who worked at the wagonyard with his uncle.
The old man was breathless. “I have hunted you everywhere,” he wheezed, his eyes wide with excitement. “Your uncle has taken the shotgun that they keep at the company office and has gone to shoot a man!”
Robles held him hard by the shoulders. “Speak clearly! Where did he go!”
Agostino gasped out, “Earlier, a man by the Supreme insulted him and caused him to be degraded in front of others. Now Tio has gone to kill him.”
Jimmy ran with his heart pounding against his chest, praying to God and His Mother to let him get there before anything happened. A block away from the Supreme he saw the people milling about the street, with all attention toward the front of the saloon. He heard the deep discharge of a shotgun and the people scattered as if the shot were a signal. In the space of a few seconds the street was deserted.
He slowed the motion of his legs and approached the rest of the way at a walk. Nothing moved in front of the Supreme, but across the street he saw figures in the shadowy doorways of the Samas Café and the hotel next door. A man stepped out to the street and he saw it was John Benedict.
“Your uncle just shot Sid Roman. Raked his legs with a Greener. He’s up there in the doorway laying half dead.”
He made out the shape of a man lying beneath the swing doors of the Supreme. In the dusk the street was quiet, more quiet than he had ever known it, as if he and John Benedict were alone. And then the scream pierced the stillness. “God Almighty somebody help me!” It hung there, a cold wail in the gloom, then died.
“That’s Sid,” Benedict whispered. “Tio’s inside with his pistol. If anybody gets near that door, he’ll let go and most likely finish off Sid. He’s got Remillard and Judge Essery and I don’t know who else inside. They didn’t get out in time. God knows what he’ll do to them if he gets jumpy.”
“Why did Tio shoot him?”
“They say about an hour ago Sid come staggering out drunk and bumped into your uncle and started telling him where to go. But your uncle was just as drunk and he wouldn’t take any of it. They started swinging and Sid got Tio down and rubbed his face in the dust, then had one of his boys get a bottle, and he sat there drinking like he was on the front porch. Sitting on Tio. Then the old man come back about an hour later and let go at him with the Greener.” John Benedict added, “I can’t say I blame him.”
Jimmy Robles said, “What were you doing while Sid was on the front porch?” and started toward the Supreme, not waiting for an answer.
John Benedict followed him. “Wait a minute,” he called, but stopped when he got to the middle of the street.
On the saloon steps he could see Sid Roman plainly in the square of light under the doors, lying on his back with his eyes closed. A moan came from his lips, but it was almost inaudible. No sound came from within the saloon.
He mounted the first step and stood there. “Tio!”
No answer came. He went all the way up on the porch and looked down at Roman. “Tio! I’m taking this man away!”
Without hesitating he grabbed the wounded man beneath the arms and pulled him out of the doorway to the darkened end of the ramada past the windows. Roman screamed as his legs dragged across the boards. Jimmy Robles moved back to the door and the quietness settled again.
He pushed the door in, hard, and let it swing back, catching