The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard - Elmore Leonard [170]
“You’re camped back in there?” Mitchell asked, and he was thinking, watching the man studying him: I’m the wrong man and now he doesn’t know what to do. The man with the rifle didn’t reply and Mitchell said, “I’m ready to camp the night. If you already got a place, maybe I could join you.”
For a moment the man didn’t answer. Then the rifle, a long-barreled Remington, waved in a short arc. “Light down.”
Mitchell let his right rein fall as he came off the sorrel. The rifle waved again. The man stood aside and Mitchell walked past him leading the sorrel. They moved through the trees, thinly scattered aspen, then cottonwood as the ground began to slope gradually, and Mitchell knew there’d be a creek close by. Unexpectedly, then, he saw the broad clearing and a wagon illuminated by firelight.
The ribbed canvas covering of it formed a pale background for the two figures who stood watching him approach. A man, his legs slightly apart and his hand covering the butt of a holstered revolver. A woman was next to him and she watched Mitchell with open curiosity as he entered the clearing.
“Rady’s brought us a guest,” the woman said.
The man with the rifle was next to Mitchell now. “Hyatt, he says he wants to camp.” The woman walked to the fire, but Hyatt, his hand still on the revolver, didn’t move. Nor did he answer, and his eyes remained on Mitchell. “He said he was ready to camp the night,” Rady added, “so I thought—”
“Open your coat,” Hyatt said. “Hold it open.”
Slowly Mitchell spread the coat open. “I’m not armed.”
“He’s got a carbine on the horse,” Rady said.
Hyatt glanced at him. “Go back where you were.”
MITCHELL DROPPED the rein and walked toward the low-burning fire as the woman extended a porcelain cup toward him and said, “Coffee?” Behind him he heard Rady’s footsteps in the dry leaves, then fading to nothing, and he felt Hyatt watching him as he took the cup of coffee, his hand momentarily touching the woman’s. “You drink your coffee, then move off,” Hyatt said. He was in his early thirties, but a week-old beard stubble darkened his face, adding ten years to his appearance. His face was drawn into tight, sunken cheeks and he looked as if he’d never smiled in his life. To the woman he said, “I’ll tell you when we start giving coffee to everybody who goes by.”
Mitchell hesitated, letting the sudden tension inside him subside, and he thought, Don’t let him rile you. Don’t even tell him to go to hell. He said to Hyatt, “I’ll leave in a minute.”
“You’ll leave sooner if I say so.”
Maybe you ought to tell him, at that, Mitchell thought. Just to see what he’d do. But he heard the woman say, “Hy, don’t talk like that,” and he turned to the fire again.
“You shut your mouth!” Hyatt told her.
Mitchell sipped his coffee, his eyes on the woman. Her face was lit by the firelight and it shone warmly and cleanly. He watched her glance at Hyatt but not answer him and he said to her, mildly, “I don’t want to start a family argument.”
“We’ll ignore him, then,” the woman said. She smiled and the smile was faintly in her eyes. She’d impressed Mitchell as a woman who smiled little, and the soft radiance that came briefly into her eyes surprised him. Still, she fell into a type in Mitchell’s mind: small, frail looking, a woman who picked at her food yet was strong and you wondered what kept her going. Light hair, thin, delicately formed features, and dark shadows beneath the eyes. A serious kind, a woman who loved strongly and simply. A woman who spoke little. This, Mitchell believed, was the most interesting type of all. The most feminine, even while sometimes reminding you of a little boy. At least the most appealing. Perhaps the kind to marry.
She said, “Could I ask where you’re going?”
“Home,” Mitchell answered. No, she didn’t exactly fit the type. She talked too freely.
“Where is that?”
“Banderas. I just left Whipple Barracks yesterday. Discharged.”
“I thought so,” the woman said. “Just the way you stand.”
“I suppose some of