“Bates? Bates?”
Bates tried to get up.
“No, I think you’d be better off if you don’t move. Wait, I’ll see what I can do about stoppin’ the bleedin’.”
Staying low on the floor, Graham crawled over to the bunk and pulled off a blanket. Returning to Bates, he tore the blanket into a couple of strips and wrapped them around Bates, covering the wounds.
“Thanks,” Bates said.
Graham raised up to look outside, and he could see a few people moving around. He took a couple of shots at them, but didn’t hit anyone. He took another look at Bates. Bates’s eyes were closed and he was breathing in shallow, gasping breaths.
Graham moved over to another part of the cabin and began writing.
Over the next two hours, the shooting continued, heavier sometimes than others, but never so light as to give Graham the idea that if he tried to leave he could make it. But he wouldn’t leave anyway, not with Bates too badly hurt to leave with him.
“Bates?” Graham called. “Bates, how are you doin’?”
“I ain’t doin’ all that well,” Bates replied, the pain evident in his voice.
“Don’t you be dyin’ on me now, pard, you hear me? I don’t want to be left all alone here.”
There were several more shots and the bullets sounded like pebbles rattling off the thick-sided line shack.
“You reckon Emmitt an’ Cooter is dead already?” Bates asked.
“I reckon so.”
“I’m goin’ to die too, ain’t I?”
“Pard, I reckon both of us are goin’ to die,” Graham replied.
“Yeah. Well, at least me ’n you had us a woman. Emmitt never had him one a-tall. Wish we could’a got him to town and done what we was goin’ to do.”
Bates grew quiet after that, and Graham went back to his writing.
“Bates, I know you’re bad hit, but if you could look out the back and just tell me if they are comin’. It’s kind of hard me tryin’ to hold ’em off all alone like this. Bates?”
Graham went over and put his ear on Bates’s chest to listen for a heartbeat, but he got none.
“You sons of bitches!” Graham shouted through the broken window. He raised up and fired several rounds, but they were fired in frustration only. He knew he didn’t hit anything. Nor could he. Then he saw them pull up a wagon and start loading it with brush and weed. That didn’t look good to him.
He sat back down and started writing again. He was writing now just out of a sense of need to keep himself from going mad with fear.
For the time being, the shooting had stopped, except for one or two shots thrown toward the cabin every minute or so just to keep Graham trapped inside. Raising up, he could see them quite clearly now. He thought he recognized one of them.
The wagon came rolling down toward the line shack, hopped up over the low front porch, then crashed into the side. Within moments the line shack was on fire, and though there were no flames inside yet, the smoke was so thick that Graham could scarcely breathe. Coughing and with his eyes watering and burning, Graham picked up Bates’s pistol so that he had two guns. He entertained the hope that because there was so much smoke, it might cover his escape. Holding on to that thought, Graham cocked both pistols, then kicked the door open and dashed outside, firing both pistols.
There was very little smoke outside, most of it being whipped in through the little cabin by the wind. As a result, Graham found himself standing in the open, looking at a ring of men, all wearing yellow kerchiefs. With a shout of rage and fear, Graham continued to blaze away as at least six of the rustlers fired at him. He felt the first two bullets plunge into his body, but the third hit him in the forehead and his world went black.
Chapter Five
Frewen was in the study of his house reading a letter from London when Clara came into the study.
“Clara, guess what,” Frewen said, looking up from the letter. “Your sister Jennie is coming to visit you.”