Online Book Reader

Home Category

The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard - Elmore Leonard [220]

By Root 2111 0
owe him something, something more than feeling sorry for him which does him no good. I think we have something in common. I can feel sorry for both of us. He laughed at this and tried to discover other things they might have in common. It relaxed him, his imagination wandering, and soon he dozed off with the cool breeze on his face, not remembering to think about his end approaching.

TO THE EAST, above the chimneys of the Organ range, morning light began to gray-streak the day. Ofelio opened his eyes, hearing the horse moving through the trees below him: hooves clicking the small stones and the swish of pine branches. He thought of Joe Slidell’s mustangs. One of them has wandered up the slope. But then, the unmistakable squeak of saddle leather and he sat up, tensed. It could be anyone, he thought. Almost anyone.

He rose, folding the blanket over his shoulder, and made his way down the slope silently, following the sound of the horse, and when he reached the pasture he saw the dim shape of it moving toward the shack, a tall shadow gliding away from him in the half light.

The door opened. Joe Slidell came out, closing it quickly behind him. “You’re up early,” he said, yawning, pulling a suspender over his shoulder. “How’s that horse carry you? He learned his manners yesterday… won’t give you no trouble. If he does, you let me have him back for about an hour.” Slidell looked above the horse to the rider. “Mr. Stam, why’re you lookin’ at me like that?” He squinted up in the dimness. “Mr. Stam, what’s the matter? You feelin’ all right?”

“Tell her to come out,” John Stam said.

“What?”

“I said tell her to come out.”

“Now, Mr. Stam—” Slidell’s voice trailed off, but slowly a grin formed on his mouth. He said, almost embarrassedly, “Well, Mr. Stam, I didn’t think you’d mind.” One man talking to another now. “Hell, it’s only a little Mex gal from Mesilla. It gets lonely here and—”

John Stam spurred the stallion violently; the great stallion lunged, rearing, coming down with thrashing hooves on the screaming man. Slidell went down covering his head, falling against the shack boards. He clung there gasping as the stallion backed off; the next moment he was crawling frantically, rising, stumbling, running; he looked back seeing John Stam spurring and he screamed again as the stallion ran him down. John Stam reined in a tight circle and came back over the motionless form. He dismounted before the shack and went inside.

Go away, quickly, Ofelio told himself, and started for the other side of the pasture, running tensed, not wanting to hear what he knew would come. But he could not outrun it, the scream came turning him around when he was almost to the woods.

Marion Stam was in the doorway, then running across the yard, swerving as she saw the corral suddenly in front of her. John Stam was in the saddle spurring the stallion after her, gaining as she followed the rail circle of the corral. Now she was looking back, seeing the stallion almost on top of her. The stallion swerved suddenly as the woman screamed going over the edge of the ravine.

Ofelio ran to the trees before looking back. John Stam had dismounted. He removed bridle and saddle from the bay and put these in the shack. Then he picked up a stone and threw it at the stallion, sending it galloping for the open pasture.

The old man was breathing in short gasps from the running, but he hurried now through the woods and did not stop until he reached the barn. He sat on the bunk listening to his heart, feeling it in his chest. Minutes later John Stam opened the big door. He stood looking down at Ofelio while the old man’s mind repeated: Mary, Virgin and Mother, until he heard the rancher say, “You didn’t see or hear anything all night. I didn’t leave the house, did I?”

Ofelio hesitated, then nodded slowly as if committing this to memory. “You did not leave the house.”

John Stam’s eyes held threateningly before he turned and went out. Minutes later Ofelio saw him leave the house with a shotgun under his arm. He crossed the yard and entered the woods. Already he is unsure,

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader