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The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard - Elmore Leonard [136]

By Root 2189 0
And many of these he gave to his chief out of honor.

“One day he returned from war gravely wounded and his hands empty, but he noticed that still this chief, who was the son of a chief and he the son of one before him, received more spoils than anyone, yet without endangering himself by being present on the raid. Now this grieved the warrior. He would not offend his chief, but he was beginning to think this unjust.

“On a day after his wound had healed, he was walking in a deep canyon with this in his thoughts and as it grew unbearable he cried out to U-sen why should this be, and immediately a spirit appeared before him. Now, this spirit questioned the warrior, asking him how a man became chief, and the warrior answered that it was blood handed from father to son. And the spirit asked him where in the natural order was this found? Did one lobo wolf lead the pack because of his blood? The warrior thought deeply of this and gradually he realized that chieftain- ship of blood was not just. It was the place of the bravest warrior to lead—not for his own sake, but for the good of all.

“You know what he did, Cor-sen?” Bonito paused then. “He returned to the rancheria and challenged his chief and fought him to the death with his knife. Two others opposed him, and he killed these also. With this the people realized that it was as it should be and the warrior was acclaimed chief of Mescaleros.

“That was the first time, Cor-sen, but it has happened many times since. When one is no longer deserving to be chief, then another opposes him. Sometimes the opposed chief steps aside; often it is settled with a knife.”

Corsen was silent. Then he said, “At Pinaleño Bil-Clin is still a strong chief. And he is wise enough not to lead his people in a war he cannot win.”

Bonito’s heavy face creased into a grim smile. “Is he strong …and wise?” Then he said, his tone changing, “Do you go away from here?”

“Perhaps.” Corsen looked at the Apache curiously.

“It would be wise,” Bonito said, “if you went far from here.” He turned his pony then and loped off.

ROSS CORSEN followed the road to Rindo’s and the Mescalero’s parting words hung in his mind like a threat, and for a while the words made him angry. The running of their tribe was no concern of his. Not now. But it implied more than just Bonito opposing Bil-Clin. There was something else. Bonito was a renegade. He was vicious even in the eyes of his own people. Not the type to be followed as a leader unless the people were desperate. Unless he came just at the right time. And it

occurred to Corsen: like now, with a man they don’t know taking over the agency… and with unrest on every reservation in Arizona, I’d like to stay, just to handle Bonito…. But again, the hell with it. Workingunder Sellers wasn’t worth it.

He planned to go up to Whipple Barracks and talk to someone about a guide contract. He would leave his horse at Rindo’s and catch the stage there, and while he was waiting he’d have a while to be with Katie.

Chapter Two

THE HATCH & HODGES’ Central Mail section had headquarters at Fort McDowell. From there, one route angled northwest to Prescott. The Central Mail swung in an arc southeast. From McDowell the route skirted the Superstitions to Apache Junction, then continued on, changing teams at Florence, White Tanks, Gila Ford, and Rindo’s. Thomas was the last stop, the southern terminal.

Rindo’s Station had been constructed with the Apaches in mind. An oblong, thick-walled adobe building had an open stable shed at one end. The corral, holding the spare stage teams, connected behind the stable. And circling the station, out fifty-odd yards, was an adobe wall. It was thick, chest high. At the east end of the yard a stand of aspen had been hacked down and only the trunks remained. Beyond the wall the country was flat on three sides—alkali dust and heat waves shimmering over stubbles of desert growth—but to the east the ground rose gradually, barren, pale yellow climbing into deep green where piñon sprouted from the hillside.

Corsen had skirted the base of the hill and now he

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