The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard - Elmore Leonard [223]
I asked him, “What is it?”
And he said, “Don’t let the long hair fool you. It’s a boy …a white boy.”
We had to take Max’s word for it at first, for that boy cut the strangest figure I ever saw. Maybe twelve years old, he was, with long dark hair hanging to his shoulders Apache style, matted and tangled, but he didn’t have on a rag headband and that’s why you didn’t think of Apache when you looked at him, even though his skin was weathered mahogany and the rest of his getup might have been Indian. His shirt was worn-out cotton and open all the way down, no buttons left; his pants were buckskin, homemade by Indian or Mexican, you couldn’t tell which, and he wasn’t wearing shoes.
The bare feet made you feel sorry for him even after you looked close and saw something half wild about him. You wondered if the mind was translating what the eyes saw into man-talk or into some kind of gray-shadowed animal understanding.
TERRY MC NEIL WAS toward the back, leaning on the counter close to Delia. They were just looking. I got up from the desk (it was by the front window and served as “office” for the Hatch & Hodges Line’s Banderas station), but I just stood there, not wanting to go up and gawk at the boy like he was P. T. Barnum’s ten-cent attraction.
“The good are rewarded,” Max Repper said. He grinned showing his crooked yellow teeth, which always took the humor out of anything funny he ever said. “I was thinking about hiring a boy when I found this one.” He looked at the boy standing motionless. “He’s going to work for me free.”
I asked now, “Where’d you find him?”
“Snoopin’ around my stores.”
“Where’s he from?”
“Damn’ if I know. He don’t even talk.”
Max pulled the boy forward by the shoulder right up in front of me and said, “What do you judge his breed to be?” Like the boy was a paint mustang with spots Max hadn’t ever seen before.
I asked him again where he’d found the boy and he told how a few nights ago he’d heard something in the lean-to back of his shack, and had eased out there in his sock feet and jabbed a Henry in the boy’s back as he was taking down Max’s fresh jerky strings.
He kept the boy tied up the rest of the night and fed him in the morning, watched him stuff jerked venison into his mouth, asked him where he came from, and got only grunts for answers.
He put the boy to work watering his corral mounts, and the way the boy roughed the horses told Max maybe there was Apache in his background. But Max didn’t know any Apache words and the boy wasn’t volunteering any. Max thought of Spanish. The only trouble was he didn’t know Spanish either.
The second night the boy tried to run away and Max (grinning as he told it) beat him blue. The third morning Max decided (reluctantly) he’d have to bring the boy in for shoeing. Shoes cost money, but barefooted a boy don’t work so good—not on a south Arizona horse ranch.
I realized then Max was honest-to-goodness planning on keeping the boy, but I mentioned, just to make sure, “I suppose you’ll take him to Dos Fuegos and turn him over to the Army.”
“What for? He don’t belong to them.”
“He don’t belong to you either.”
“He sure as hell does. Long as I feed him.”
I told Max, “Maybe the Army can trace where this boy came from.”
But Repper said he’d tried for two days to get something out of the boy, and if he couldn’t, then no lousy Army man could expect to.
“The kid’s had his chance to talk,” Max said. “If he don’t want to, all right, then. I’ll draw him pictures of what to do and push him to’ard it.”
Max sat the boy down on a stool and I handed the shoes to him and he jammed them on the boy’s feet until he thought he’d found the right size. When Max started to button one of them up the boy yanked his foot away and grunted like it hurt him. Max reached up and swatted the boy across the face and he kept still then.
I remember thinking: He handles the boy like he would a wild mustang, not like a human being. And Terry McNeil must have been thinking the same thing. He came up