escaping. The Cherokee had taken two horses and was hanging between them; Call couldn't see him at all.
He shot again at Mox Mox and hit him in the shoulder; then Mox Mox, too, was among the horses. The three Mexicans and the small man were running for their rifles, which had been propped against their saddles. They were slow, perhaps drunk.
Call shot all four of them and put them down, not for good, probably, but down.
Mox Mox couldn't ride as well as Jimmy Cumsa. Even without a broken shoulder, he could not have handled animals well enough to hang between two horses, but he managed to do the next best thing, which was to spook all the horses and raise a dust.
Call snapped a shot at one of the horses Jimmy Cumsa was escaping with; the horse went down, but the Cherokee didn't go down with it. He switched to the other horse and struggled into the saddle. Call shot again, but by then the range was long and the bullet kicked up dust.
One of the fallen Mexicans was trying to run to his horse, but his horse was carrying Mox Mox away. Call shot the Mexican again and then threw one more shot at Mox Mox. He could scarcely see him, for the dust, but he thought he hit him in the leg. The big man was stirring, so Call shot him again. What nagged him was the eighth man--where could he be? Almost as the question registered in his mind, he saw a man trying to pull up his pants, a good distance beyond the camp. He had been shitting and was trying to get his pants up so he could run away, when Call saw him. He was a long way from camp, but Call took a slow aim and brought him down.
Mox Mox and Jimmy Cumsa were far out of range, but still going. Maybe they would keep running, but there was also a chance they would return and make a fight of it. It would depend on how badly Mox Mox was wounded, and whether he was disposed to fight. Jimmy Cumsa had run from Quanah Parker; probably he would run again, but that was not a certainty.
Call reloaded, took both rifles, stuck one in his belt, andwitha pistol in one hand and a rifle in the other, leading his horse--he had to hold the bridle reins in his teeth--came down into the camp. Of the six men down, only the last one, the one who had been shitting, was dead; when, a little later, Call walked out and turned him over, he found a boy in his late teens, with black teeth. The other men he had to dispatch with his pistol, which he did quickly. He was not in a position to take prisoners, much less to nurse wounded outlaws who would only recover to be hung, if they recovered at all.
Call had no difficulty freeing the children. The short chain that held them was only fastened with wire. The little boy was still moaning; his face ran blood. Call washed the blood away with water from one of the dead men's canteens. One of the boy's eyes had swollen shut, probably from being hit with the tip of the quirt. The eye itself did not appear to be hurt, and the other eye was not damaged. The cuts on the boy's face were deep, but he was young, and he would recover.
The little girl grabbed Call's leg and clung to it so tightly he had to pull her arms loose in order to lift her up.
'Want Ma. ...' she said. 'Want Ma.
...' The little boy had stopped moaning. He seemed numb. He looked at Call with his one open eye gratefully, though.
'He said he'd whip my eyes out,' the boy said. 'He said he'd burn Marcie.' 'He's gone--he won't put your eyes out and he won't burn your sister. Can you stand up?' The boy stood up. He was shaky, from the shock of the violence, and probably from lack of proper food. But he could walk.
The horse Call shot was on its feet again; it stood pawing the ground, about a hundred yards away. It was saddled. If it was not too badly injured, it might do for the children. Call was keenly conscious that he needed to move, and move at once. The ridge that had provided his cover before the fight would provide the same cover for the Garza boy, who, if he was following, would undoubtedly have heard the shooting. All Joey Garza would have to do would be to crawl up behind the ridge and shoot; he wouldn't need his telescope sight. Call and the children were within easy range.
'Stay a minute, I need to catch this horse so we can go,' Call told the children. He left them standing together. The little girl tried to run after him, but the boy grabbed her arm and pulled her back.
Call caught the wounded horse easily and was relieved to see that its wound wasn't crippling.
The wound was in the neck. It was bleeding profusely, but he could stop the bleeding, and the horse could carry the two children. Fort Stockton was not more than forty miles away.
'Mister, have you got a biscuit?' the boy asked, when Call returned, leading the horse.
'Me and Marcie ain't had no food. That squint-eye wouldn't give us none.' Call rummaged quickly in the dead men's kit and found some jerky and a few stiff tortillas. He gave them to the children.
'This is all I can do for now,' Call said.
'We have to leave here. Can you ride a horse?' 'I guess I can,' the boy said, with some pride. 'Pa got me Brownie when I was three, and I'm nine now.' His wounds were still running blood. The whole front of his shirt was stained with it. But that could be attended to later, when they were safe.
'We have to move,' Call said. 'We ain't safe here. The man who quirted you might come back.' 'Why didn't you kill him, mister?' the boy asked.
'I tried--I hit him,' Call said.
'I wish you'd kilt him,' the boy said. 'He said he'd burn Marcie.' Call gathered up serapes from the dead men.
He wrapped the children well, against the cold, and put them on the wounded horse. Probably neither of the children had been warm in days. The little girl shivered so badly that Call thought he might have to tie her to the horse, but he didn't. It wouldn't do to have her tied to a horse if there was another fight.
He took several blankets and what food he could find. At the last minute, he discovered a piece of antelope haunch, wrapped in some sacking. That was lucky. He cut off two pieces and gave them to the children, to gnaw as they rode.
He decided to lead the wounded horse. With Mox Mox and Jimmy Cumsa somewhere ahead of him, perhaps waiting in ambush, and with Joey Garza behind him, if it was Joey Garza behind him, he needed as much control over the animals as he could get.