'They won't send us back to Yuma,' Deke said.

'That's one thing you can count on. And it costs money to rig a gallows. They'd just as lief do it here, with a gun appeals to the sporting blood.'

Sonny Navarez said, 'I once shot a mountain sheep in this same canyon that weighed as much as a man.'

'Right from the start there were signs,' Deke said. 'I was a fool not to heed them. Now it's too late. Something's brought us to die here all together, and we can't escape it. You can't escape your doom.'

Sonny Navarez said, 'I think it was twelve thousand dollars that brought us.'

'Sure it was the money, in a way,' Deke said.

'But we're so busy listening to Ford tell how easy money's restin' in the bank, waitin' to be sent to Yuma, we're not seein' the signs. Things that've never happened before. Like Ford insisting we got to have five so he picks up this kid '

Rich Miller said, 'Wait a minute!' because it didn't sound right.

Deke held up his hand. 'I'm talking about the signs and Ford all of a sudden gettin' the urge to go on scout when he never done anything like that before. It was all working toward this and now there's nothing we can do about it.'

'I ain't going to get shot up just because you got a crazy notion,' Eugene said.

Deke shook his head, wearily. 'It's sealed up now.

After fate shows how it's going, then it's too late.'

'I didn't shoot that man in the bank!'

'You think they'll bother to ask you?'

'Damn it, I'll tell 'em and they'll have to prove I did it!'

'If you can get close enough to 'em without gettin' shot,' Deke said quietly. He brought out field glasses from his saddlebags, which were below the window, and put the glasses to his face, edging them along the men far below in front of the company buildings.

Rich Miller said to him, 'What do you see down there?'

'Same thing you do, only bigger.'

'I think,' Sonny Navarez said to Deke, 'that you are right in what you have said, that they will try hard to kill us but this boy is not one of us. I think if he would surrender, they would not kill him.

Prison, perhaps, but prison is better than dying.'

'You worry about yourself,' Rich Miller said.

'The time to be brave,' the Mexican said, 'is when they are handing out medals.'

'You heard him,' Deke said. 'Worry about your own hide. The more people we got, the longer we last. There's nothing that says if you're going to get killed, you got to hurry it up.'

Rich Miller watched Eugene move back to the table along the rear wall and pick up the whiskey bottle that was there. The boy passed his tongue over dry lips, watching Eugene drink. It would be good to have a drink, he thought. No, it wouldn't.

It would be bad. You drank too much and that's why you're here. That's why you're going to get shot or hung.

But he could not sincerely believe what Deke had said. That one way of the other, this was the end.

Down the slope the posse was very far away dots of men that seemed too small to be a threat. He did not feel sorry about joining the holdup, because he did not let himself think about it. He did feel something resembling sorry for the man in the bank. But he shouldn't have reached for the gun. I wonder if I would have, he thought.

It wasn't so bad up here in the 'dobe. Plenty of water and grub. Maybe we'll have some fun. Look at that crazy Mexican, talking about hunting mountain sheep.

If you were in jail you could say, all right, you made a mistake; but how do you know if you've made a mistake when you're still alive and got two thousand dollars in your pants? My God, a man can do just about anything with two thousand dollars!

Freehouser sat in the shade, not saying anything.

McKelway came to him, biting on his pipe idly, and after a while pointed to the mine shaft scaffolding and said how a man with a good rifle might be able to draw a bead and throw something in that open doorway if he was sitting way up there on top.

Freehouser studied the ore tailings, furrowed and steep, that extended out from the slope on both sides of the hut. If a man was going up to that 'dobe, he'd have to go straight up, right into their guns. Maybe McKelway had something. Soften them up a bit.

Standing by the windows, watching the possemen not moving, became tiresome. So one by one they would go back to the table and take a drink. Rich Miller took his turn and it tasted good. But he did not drink much.

Still, the time dragged on until Eugene thought of something. He went to his gear and drew a deck of cards.

Sonny Navarez said, 'I have not played often.'

'Stand by the window awhile,' Deke told him.

'Then somebody'll spell you. You got enough cash to learn with.'

Eugene shook his head, thinking of his brother, who had taken twice as much as the others because the holdup had been his idea. 'Damn Ford had four thousand in his bags. . . .'

They started playing, using matches for chips, each one worth a dollar. Rich Miller said the stakes were big . . . he'd never played higher than nickeldime before; but he began winning right off and he changed his tune. Most of the time they played fivecard stud. Deke said it separated the men from the boys and he looked at Rich Miller when he said it. Deke played with a dumb face, but would smile after the last card was dealt as if the last card always twinned the one he had in the hole. And he lost every hand. Eugene and Rich Miller took turns winning the pots, and after a while Deke stopped smiling.

'We're raising the stakes,' he said finally. 'Each stick's worth ten dollars.' Deke's cut was down to a few hundred dollars.

Eugene took a drink and wiped his mouth and grinned. 'Ain't you losing it fast enough?'

Rich Miller grinned with him.

Deke said, 'Just deal the cards.'

McKelway reached the platform on top of the shaft scaffolding and dropped the line to haul up the rifles his own Sharps and Jim Mission's rollblock Remington. He was glad Jim Mission was coming up with him. Jim was company and could shoot probably better than he could.

When Jim reached the platform the two men nodded and smiled, then loaded their rifles and practice sighted on the doorway. McKelway said, Try not to hit the boy, though knocking off any of the others would be doing mankind a good turn, and Jim Mission said it was all right with him.

Eugene got up from the table unsteadily, tipping back his chair; he was grinning and stuffing currency into his pants pockets. In two hours he had won every cent of Deke's and Rich Miller's money.

They remained seated, watching him sullenly, thinking it was a damn fool thing to try and win back all your losings in a couple of hands. Eugene took another pull at the bottle and wiped his mouth and looked at them, but he only grinned.

'Sonny!' He called to the Mexican lounging beside the window. 'Your turn to get skinned.'

The Mexican shook his head. 'I could not oppose such luck.'

'Come on!'

Sonny Navarez shook his head again and smiled.

Harlan looked at him steadily, frowning. 'Are you going to play?'

'Why should I give you my money?'

'You don't come over here, I'll come get you.'

The Mexican did not smile now and the room was silent. Rich Miller started to rise, but Deke was up first. 'Gene, you want to fight somebody there's plenty outside.'

Eugene ignored him and kept on toward Sonny.

The Mexican's hand edged toward his holstered pistol.

'Gene, you sit down now,' Deke said tensely.

Eugene stepped into the rectangle of sunlight carpeting in from the doorway. He was stepping out of it when

Вы читаете Blood Money and Other Stories
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×