Canyon of the dead, p.1
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Canyon of the Dead, page 1

 

Canyon of the Dead
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Canyon of the Dead


  CANYON OF THE DEAD

  Canyon of the Dead

  ANDREW McBRIDE

  © Andrew McBride 1996

  First published in Great Britain 1996

  ISBN 978 0 7198 2379 4

  Robert Hale, an imprint of

  The Crowood Press Ltd

  The Stable Block

  Crowood Lane

  Ramsbury

  Wiltshire SN8 2HR

  www.crowood.com

  www.bhwesterns.com

  This e-book first published in 2017

  The right of Andrew McBride to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  Thanks again to P.O. and J.

  ONE

  Calvin Taylor woke instantly.

  He listened.

  Silence was thick in his ears. Not that the desert night was ever totally silent; but it was at its quietest now, in the darkest time. Taylor had to strain to hear distantly, the singing of a canyon wren. Gradually, he identified other sounds; the shuffling of hooves; horses stirring in the corral, thirty yards north.

  Was it the horses’ nervousness that had awakened him? Or were there men near the corral?

  He reached through the darkness until he touched the barrel of the Winchester. There was some comfort in the chill of metal against his fingers. Especially if there were men near the horses. These men would be horsethieves. They might be white men or Apaches. It made no difference. Here, in Arizona Territory, horse-theft was the worst of all crimes; practitioners of the trade could expect only death and they’d be likely to respond in kind.

  Taylor sat up. In a few minutes, he judged, false dawn would begin to show. He’d found it too hot to sleep indoors last night, instead he’d slept in the grounded wagon by the corral. He wore only longjohns and vest; now he pulled on his Apache moccasins, baggy deerskin boots that reached up over his knees. He buckled the gunbelt about his waist with the pistol, in its battered holster, against his right hip. He slid over the wagon tailgate, lowered himself noiselessly to earth, hoisted the Winchester after him and squatted under the wagon.

  The valley floor was still in darkness. Taylor couldn’t see any of the buildings – the barn, the adobe house – that made up the waystation of Coyote Springs. Nor could he see the horses, although he could hear them. They sneezed and coughed, stamping their feet. There were nine horses in the saddleband, mostly quarter horses, duns and paints, all of them riding stock and new to the saddle.

  The stationhand, Dan Beckwirth, was bunking in the adobe, forty paces east of the corral. Almost certainly he would have noticed the disquiet of the stock. He’d be watching now, his ‘Yellowboy’ Winchester ready. Between them, Taylor and Beckwirth would have any horsethieves in a crossfire. They could turn the corral into a butcher’s yard.

  Thinking of that, Taylor felt his stomach tighten, but fear was already gouging him there. He felt dizzy with it, his throat fiercely dry. Don’t do it, he told the horsethieves. It’s not worth it, for just nine horses.

  Dawn – a block of shining gold – was flushing the sky beyond the mountains. If there were men near the corral and if they were horsethieves, they’d have to move now, before full light. Already the dimness of the valley floor had faded from black to green. He began to detect movement, horses milling behind the corral bars. He stared at them until his eyes began to ache and just as he’d convinced himself he was staring at shadows, that there was nothing there, the pole barring the corral gate fell, ringing against the earth. The gate was flung wide and he heard a man yell at the top of his voice.

  Taylor jammed the buttplate of his rifle into his shoulder, began to squeeze off a shot; Beckwirth fired first, from the bunkhouse. The horses started forward, boiling from the corral. The first swerved out through the gate. Taylor shot the second animal, putting it down in the gateway; the horses behind veered back, began to circle in the corral. They set up a fiendish screaming, ramming the mesquite bars. Taylor saw a man rear up against the sky, struggling to stay aboard a pitching horse. This would be the horsethief who’d sneaked into the corral, the daring one who’d thrown down the gate pole, herding the other horses before him. Taylor took a quick aim on him, fired and saw him knocked sideways; he fell amongst the horses.

  Taylor levered the Winchester but the gloom before him was ripped apart in a blue explosion of flame. He ducked. The bullet struck the wagon bed above him. There was a dim shape running towards him. He took quick aim on the running man and squeezed the trigger. The dawn was rocked with a double concussion; the other man had fired at the same instant.

  For a minute Taylor was deafened; he was blinded too, by the muzzle flash, then he heard the crazed whinnying of the horses in the corral. He blinked until he could see. Daylight was coming; he made out the corral, the waystation buildings, the mountains behind them. He saw a man lying thirty yards away, west of the corral. Taylor’s bullet had spun him around, thrown him flat on his face. Now he sat up, one hand to his left shoulder.

  Taylor stood. He walked towards the wounded man, halting ten paces from him. Taylor lifted his Winchester. He said, ‘Keep still.’ He spoke in Spanish. The horsethief looked like a charro – a Mexican cowboy – fallen on hard times, his leather jacket and trousers scuffed and whitened with dust. His straw sombrero had fallen from his head. There was blood all over the front of his shirt and jacket and he gasped with pain.

  A rifle lay in the dust perhaps three yards away. Charro glanced over at the weapon, then at Taylor. He smiled. In Spanish he said, ‘Better a bullet than a rope.’

  Taylor nodded slowly. He said, ‘If you feel that way, try for it.’

  Charro thought about it; perhaps for a minute; Dan Beckwirth approached from the east, his Winchester in his hands. Charro stared at Beckwirth, then at Taylor. He shrugged.

  Taylor found his arms were trembling.

  Beckwirth declared, ‘Jesus Christ, Taylor!’

  Taylor said, ‘Watch our friend here.’ He walked over to the gun lying in the dust. It was a Spencer carbine, Civil War model, a good enough gun in its time but now, in the 1880s, ten years out of date. Taylor took the carbine by the barrel and smashed it against the wagon.

  He told Beckwirth, ‘Get a rope.’

  ‘A rope?’

  ‘I figger there’s a dead man in the corral. Why those horses are still crazy.’

  He roped the body in the corral and dragged it out from under the bars. Perhaps his shot had killed the man; he couldn’t tell. There wasn’t much he could tell about the horsethief, after the saddleband had kicked and trampled him to rags. Taylor asked Beckwirth, ‘How about fixing some breakfast?’

  ‘You had two men for breakfast!’

  Beckwirth was barely twenty but his pale hair was receding already. A handlebar moustache aged his face. His fair skin gave him a lot of trouble under the Arizona sun. He glanced at the dead man uneasily. ‘What about that corpse?’

  ‘We’ll plant him round sundown.’

  ‘Why wait?’

  ‘It’ll be too hot, during the day, to dig graves.’

  They buried the horsethief at sunset. Taylor and Beckwirth took turns digging. They’d placed some rocks on top of the dead man, to keep away wolves and other predators. They covered the rocks with earth. Their prisoner watched, his arm in the crude sling Beckwirth had fashioned for him. Taylor patted the earth flat with his shovel. He asked Charro, ‘You want to say something?’

  Charro nodded. He’d been a good Catholic boy once; he remembered the words to an old prayer. Listening, Taylor remembered the body in the corral, he thought how random and senseless death seemed; he was conscious of the vastness of this lonely plain, how insignificant one person was, measured against the desert and the mountains and the sky. He was conscious of his own mortality. He supposed the others were thinking the same things. Gazing off to the north-east he told Beckwirth ‘Someone’s coming.’

  ‘I don’t see nothin’.’

  ‘Horsebacker coming.’

  A few minutes later, Beckwirth said, ‘You’re right. You got good eyes, Taylor.’ After another minute studying the approaching rider, he declared, ‘That might be Pete Olsen.’

  ‘Olsen?’

  ‘Sure. Grant County lawman. Ain’t you heard of him? He’s famous for—’

  Taylor smiled wryly. ‘I know what he’s famous for.’

  Olsen was riding a bayo coyote, a dun horse with a black stripe along the spine. Eyeing the horse, Taylor made a sound of admiration in his throat. Olsen reined in his mount. He studied the new grave and the three men standing by it. He asked, ‘Dan Beckwirth, ain’t it?’

  ‘Olsen.’

  Pete Olsen was a stocky man, with a square, wide-mouthed face. Sometime in the past Olsen’s nose had been broken; perhaps at the same time, perhaps on another occasion, he’d obtained a long scar on his right cheek, a deep wound shaped something like a question mark. The scar, the broken nose, the splayed teeth, gave his face, which wasn’t handsome to begin with, a startling, almost malevolent ugliness. He didn’t attempt to soften his appearance with either moustache or beard. Nor was he fair-skinned as his Norwegian or Swedish name might indicate; the hair that fell to his shoulders in greasy rats’ tails was mud-coloured.

  Beckwirth said, ‘This is Calvin Taylor.’

  Olsen lifted a hand and rubbed the stubble on his scarred cheek. ‘Well, well. I’ve heard of you.’ His voice was cracked with dust and thirst and knowing the mountain trail down from Grant County, Taylor could
sympathize. Frontier etiquette required that the newcomer stayed in the saddle until invited to dismount. Taylor said, ‘Step down.’

  Olsen swung out of the saddle. He asked, ‘Who’s dead?’

  Beckwirth said, ‘Horsethieves tried for the stock this morning. One of ’em got shot doing it.’

  ‘Sweet Jesus. Who done the man-killing?’

  ‘Taylor here. He wounded that one.’ Beckwirth nodded towards Charro

  Olsen grinned. ‘I hear tell you’ve put under more men than the typhus, Taylor.’

  Beckwirth said, ‘That ain’t all. He shot one of them horses in the corral gateway, sort of stoppered up the gate. Saved the company stock.’

  Taylor shifted uncomfortably. He felt embarrassed, these men talking about him as if he wasn’t even there.

  Olsen said, ‘Shot two thieves and saved the horses. All in a morning’s work, eh Taylor? They hear about this in Tucson, they’ll likely elect you governor.’

  Taylor said, ‘Hope not.’

  Olsen patted his saddle. ‘I got a jug of Mex liquor here. Pulque. Anybody care to join me?’

  Beckwirth said, ‘I could fix something to eat, first.’

  Olsen mopped the last slick of bacon grease from his tin plate with a sourdough biscuit. He swallowed a soda sinker smeared with molasses, drank half a cupful of Arbuckle coffee and belched ripely. In Mexico and the border country a belch of such proportions was a compliment for good cooking. He told Beckwirth, ‘From what I hear, you cook a sight better than you shoot!’ Sweat darkened the armpits of his flannel shirt. The inside of the waystation was muggy with heat.

  Taylor washed his face in a tin bowl, considering his reflection in a fragment of mirror as he did so. He had a dark face, almost dark enough for an Indian; but his features had nothing Indian about them. His hair was dark brown, not the blue-black of Indian hair. He fingered one end of his moustache. He was thirty years old, but looked older, he decided. He was starting to look tired before his time.

  Olsen’s voice brought Taylor back from his thoughts. Olsen asked, ‘What do you figger to do with that greaser?’

  Taylor dried his hands. ‘Greaser?’

  ‘That horsethief?’

  ‘Take him back to Tucson.’

  Tucson was perhaps fifty miles to the north and west. Olsen asked, ‘Why?’

  ‘People I work for there.’

  ‘I hear you got hired by some of the big ranch owners down here. Pete Kitchen, John Slaughter, the likes of them. Or do they still kill their own snakes?’

  Taylor picked a sliver of bacon from between his teeth. ‘I heard you was a Grant County lawman. You’re out of your patch.’

  ‘I been hired to run down who’s organizing all this stock thieving. I don’t care which damn county I’m in.’

  ‘What makes you think it’s being organized? There’s always been stock thieving in this country.’

  Olsen drunk from the pulque jug, belched and wiped his mouth with the back of his wrist. ‘Not as bad as it’s been this year. You hear about the Doc Middleton band? Horsethieves up in Nebraska? Took the army, General Crook hisself, to run them down. Well, there’s something like that been set up around here, and somebody leads ’em. That’s what those … people you work for think too, ain’t it? That’s why they got together and hired the great Calvin Taylor. The great range detective.’

  Taylor smiled grudgingly. ‘Supposin’ you’re right.…’

  ‘Well?’

  ‘If it is organized, there’s a whole band of them, they need a hideout, for them and what they steal. It’ll have to have water and grass. The rains are late this spring, the flatlands are dry. So that means somewhere in the high country. Some canyon maybe, up in the mountains. Perfect place’d be a canyon that gets wide in the middle, spreads out to meadows.’

  Beckwirth said, ‘What they’d call a “hole” up north.’

  Olsen fingered the scar on his cheek. ‘’Course, something like that could be across the border in Mexico, couldn’t it?’

  Taylor nodded.

  Olsen asked, ‘When you taking your prisoner to Tucson, Taylor?’

  ‘Tomorrow.’

  ‘All right if I ride along? Two can stand guard better than one.’

  Taylor shrugged.

  Olsen drank again. ‘So you figger we’re looking for a robbers’ roost?’

  Taylor grunted a yes. ‘We find that hideout, we can break this rustlers’ thing.’

  ‘If it’s this side of the border.’

  ‘If it is or if it ain’t.’

  ‘You don’t even care what country you’re in, huh?’ Olsen grinned. ‘You’re a man after my own heart, Taylor.’

  TWO

  At dusk the following day, the riders halted in the desert.

  Taylor rode a lineback horse, a dun with a black stripe along its spine. The charro rode a grey pony, judged the cheapest animal in the Coyote Springs saddleband. Olsen rode his fine coyote horse. They hadn’t pushed their animals through the day’s heat and were still about twenty miles from Tucson.

  This remained dangerous country. The Indian Wars were officially over; most of the Apache bands were corraled on reservations. Even the terrible Chiricahuas were turning into good Indians, dirt-farming on the San Carlos Agency. But the peace was new, no one trusted it yet. There were still a few renegade Chiricahua and Mexican Apache bands hiding out in the Sierra Madre, across the border in Mexico. It was also a country of horsethieves, Indian, Mexican and Anglo. So Olsen, picketing the horses, and Taylor, who drew the cooking duties, both kept their rifles close to hand.

  After eating a meal of prairie chicken – which, in the cactus and cattle country, almost never meant chicken and almost always meant bacon and beans – the travellers had a dessert of sweet, purple-red fruit. Taylor cut slices of this from a prickly pear. Olsen guessed this was something Taylor had learned about from the Indians, not the only thing he’d learned, if rumour was to be believed.…

  Olsen watched Taylor eating. He supposed women might think the range detective was a handsome man; they might like the mixing of dark complexion and blue eyes and dark hair. Olsen’s thoughts always became bitter when it came to women. He had to pay for his. But they were all whores; they all wanted paying in one way or another.

  Olsen poured coffee into a tin cup. He shaped a cornshuck cigarette. He glanced over at Charro, sitting near the horses, his hands tied before him. Olsen had started to object when Taylor fed the prisoner bacon too, but he’d let it go. He’d pick his time.

  The sunset was dull copper behind the mountains, above the black land. Giant saguaro were like weird, mutilated hands clutching convulsively at the sky. Olsen heard dusk sounds, red-spotted toads croaking, the hooing of a horned owl. He heard the regular chewing noises the horses made, eating beans off the mesquite trees.

  Taylor seemed to have the typical cowman’s aversion to words, so Olsen talked, filling in the silence between them. He said, ‘Them horsethieves – they could be operating out of Cochise County. We run the Earp gang out of the country, but that’s still a goddam sin pit. Still lousy with horsethieves.’ Olsen spat. ‘What you figger?’

  The range detective didn’t reply.

  ‘You sure talk the ass end off a muley cow, Taylor!’ Olsen declared, grinning. ‘How come you talk so goddam much?’

  Taylor turned the tin cup in his hand. ‘Just can’t shut my mouth I guess.’

  Olsen formed another cigarette. ‘’Course, there could be reds in this too. I believe Apaches is peaceful when the whole root and branch is cleaned out! Thievingest, lousiest, stinkingest bastards on God’s earth.’ He licked his cigarette papers, glancing quickly at the other man to see how his words were going down. ‘I say kill the lot of them.’ He lit the cigarette and spent a moment studying the thin lines of smoke that trailed from his nostrils. Then he looked at Taylor. He said, ‘I’ve heard a lot about you.’

  ‘Oh?’

  ‘A few years back you was scouting against the Apaches. Victorio, Nana, real bad ones. I hear them broncos used to scare their kids, tellin’ ’em if they weren’t good little Indians, you’d come and get them. What them Indians call you? Shadow Man, something like that. What’s that mean?’

  ‘Hard to explain. A shadow ain’t just a shadow to an Indian.’

 
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