The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories
and for the first time actually saw the men he had been traveling with. The officer, who was maybe in his mid-thirties, had a beard trimmed to a point and eyes half sunk in his head. And Shannon—he had a half-grin on his lips as he stared down, enjoying what he saw when he surveyed Drew. The one Kitchell called Sergeant Wayne was a big fellow, even though he was thinned down. He had a square sort of face—jaw too heavy for the rest of it. Then, Drew’s eyes came to the last man and stopped.
To the first three there was a uniformity; the remnants of military training still clung to them. But this shrunken figure with a wild gray beard, watery, bloodshot eyes, a matted thatch of hair on which a broken-rimmed hat perched, ragged and filthy clothing…
“Not gonna haul th’ Mex much farther, you ain’t!” observed this scarecrow with a touch of relish in the relayingof bad news. “He’s outta his head now, gonna be clean outta his skin come sundown.”
“All right!” said Kitchell. “We’ll camp here…in that shade.” His gesture indicated some point beyond Drew’s range of vision.
“They’re gonna be sniffin’ ’long right behind us,” the sergeant said dubiously.
“You’re forgettin’ we’ve got us sonny boy here!” Shannon loomed over Drew. “He’ll buy us out.”
“Maybe from Rennie—not from them Yankee troopers.”
“I told you”—Shannon lost his grin—“th’ Yanks ain’t gonna come all th’ way down here! There’s too much pointin’ in th’ other direction. That is, if you was as good as you said you was, Lutterfield!”
The old man grinned in turn, widely set yellow tooth stubs showing ragged. “Ain’t never failed you yet, boy. Old Amos Lutterfield, he’s got him those wot believe wot he says like it was Holy Writ—he sure has! Them troopers’ll go poundin’ down th’ Sonora road huntin’ wot never was, till they drop men an’ hosses all along. Then Nahata an’ his bucks’ll tickle ’em up a bit—an’ they’ll forgit there was anyone else t’ hunt.”
Drew lay in the position where they had dumped him, his hands still tied, the ropes on his ankles now knotted together. Had the season been high summer they would have baked in this rock slit, but it was still uncomfortably warm. He heard a low moaning and saw Kitchell and Lutterfield bending over the Mexican. It was plain that the wounded man had suffered from his enforced ride.
Some time later the Kentuckian was pulled into a sitting position. His hands loosened, he was allowed tofeed himself, but the carne tasted like wood splinters when he chewed it.
“Not much like th’ Range?” Shannon asked him. “Don’t worry none—it won’t last long, Rennie, no, it won’t!”
“You did take my papers.”
“I sure did! You thought I was clean outta m’ senses back there in th’ Jacks when that fool Texan called out your name—didn’t you now? Well, I wasn’t an’ what he said sure made me want to know a little more—seein’ as how Hunt Rennie might well be m’ pa. He owed me a Pa, you know. M’ real pa was killed gittin’ him outta prison. I didn’t want no drifters cuttin’ in on what was rightly mine, in a manner of speakin’. So I just waited m’ chance to get at that belt of yours. Found what I wanted—an’ that sorta made up m’ mind.
“Colonel Kitchell here, he wanted me to go south with him. They have them a war goin’ on down there; a man can always git ahead in wartime does he like soldierin’. But I weren’t sure ’bout goin’, till I found out as how I might jus’ be pushed out, anyway.”
“Why did you think that? Hunt Rennie’s always treated you as a real son, hasn’t he?”
“Like a real son? Like his idea of a son, you mean. Work hard—an’ havin’ books pushed at me. Always jawin’ about education an’ bein’ a gentleman! Do this, don’t do that—this’s right, that’s wrong. Bein’ soft with Injuns—Lord, I was sick of bein’ his kind of son when I went off with Howard. Rennie wasn’t even ready to fight th’ war proper—big man here, ’fraid to try it where he wasn’t! Rightly he was sick of me, too, only his precious duty wouldn’t let him say so.
“But as long as he didn’t know ’bout you, he’d try, an’ keep on tryin’. I had me a good place to hole up on th’ Range. With you there he might’n’t hold on to his patience. First off I thought I might settle you permanent, then you got took up by Bayliss.”
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