The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard - Elmore Leonard [126]
Beckwith heard the click and his head swung back. He looked at Walker as if what he saw could not be possible.
Walker held the pistol dead on the agent’s chest. “I’m not going to try to convince you of anything,” he said. “Just let go of the gun.”
The surprise passed and Beckwith’s drawn face scowled. “You’re making the biggest mistake of your life.”
“If you don’t think I’d shoot, hold on to that gun for three more seconds.”
Beckwith’s pistol was pointed midway between Risdon and Walker. His eyes held on Walker’s face, trying to read something there. Then, slowly, his arm lowered and when his hand reached his side, the fingers opened and the pistol dropped to the floor.
Risdon stooped, picked it up and glanced at Beckwith as he rose.
“You just lost yourself a job.”
“You’ve got to take him with you,” Walker said now. “Drop him at maybe Cuchillo—by the time he finds help you’ll have all the distance you’d need.”
Risdon frowned. “You’re coming now, aren’t you?”
Walker shook his head.
The girl looked at him in disbelief. “Lou, why would you stay now?”
“The same reason as before.”
“But it’s different now!”
“Why is it? I’m still a soldier. I haven’t been serving under a private flag of Beckwith’s.”
The girl continued to look at him with the plea in her eyes, but now there was nothing she could say.
Risdon shrugged. “Well, you can’t fight that.”
Walker pulled on his boots, then lifted the shoulder holster from the bedpost and slipped his arm through it and inserted the handgun. He picked up his coat and moved to the girl.
“If you don’t understand,” he said quietly, “then I don’t know what I can say.”
She looked up into his face, but without smiling, and then she kissed him.
Risdon said, “She’s tryin’.” His eyes followed Walker moving to the door. “Lou,” he said. “We thought we’d follow the Rio Grande to Cuchillo then bear west toward Santa Rita.”
Unexpectedly, Walker smiled, but he said nothing going out the door.
AT YELLOW TAVERN he had killed a Union soldier. Perhaps he had killed others, but the one at Yellow Tavern was the only one he was sure of. It had been at close range, firing down into the soldier’s face as the Yankee’s bayonet thrust caught in his horse’s mane. He fired and the blue uniform disappeared. That simple. What he was about to do no longer seemed a part of war, because the man had a name and was not just a blue uniform.
He rode out from Valverde to the cavalry station at a walk, moving the borrowed mount unhurriedly, his right leg hanging out of the stirrup. Nearing the adobes a trooper rode by and shouted, but the sound of his running mount covered the words.
The sunlight on the gray adobe was cold, because there was no one about and there were no sounds. Over the row of bare houses, far to the north, reaching into the clouds, was the whiteness of Sangre de Cristo. This, too, caused the cavalry station to seem drab. Walker knew a patrol was out. Perhaps McGrail had taken it. For a moment he felt relief, but knew that would solve nothing.
He went through a doorway above which a wooden shingle read: HEADQUARTERS—VALVERDE STATION—COS, D & E—9TH US CAVALRY.
At the desk a sergeant looked up and momentarily there was recognition on his face. But he said nothing, he only listened to the name that was given him, then stepped into the next room and closed the door behind him.
He reappeared almost immediately. “The major will see you,” and stepped aside to let Walker pass.
McGrail’s back was turned. He stood at the window behind his desk, looking out at the sand and glare.
He did not turn, but when the door closed, he said, “I’ve been expecting you.”
Walker hesitated. “Why?”
McGrail turned then. He was holding a revolving pistol in his right hand, and with the other he was wiping a cloth along the barrel.
“To return the horse you