Face headfirst to the ground.
The horse didn’t stop.
Fargo quickly reloaded. None of the warriors were moving except Little Face, who was on his side, thrashing and gurgling. Fargo walked over. With his boot he flipped Little Face onto his back. The shot had caught him in the chest and a fine mist was spraying from the bullet hole. “Can you talk?”
“Finish me.”
Fargo bent over him. “How did you get on my trail?”
Little Face sucked in a deep breath. “There was a commotion in our village. A white man was seen. I went to where I had left you with Long Forelock and Bear Loves and found them dead.”
“And?” Fargo prompted when he didn’t go on.,
Little Face sucked in another breath. “I knew you would try to warn the sen-a-tor that I wanted to count coup on him. So I gathered some friends who hate whites as much as I do, and we came to your camp. Just as we rode up, we saw you leave.”
“And you came after me to kill me.” Fargo straightened. He aimed at the center of Little Face’s forehead and thumbed back the hammer. “Any last words?”
“I hate you.”
The boom of the Colt rolled off across the hills. Fargo replaced the spent cartridge, twirled the revolver into his holster, and strode to the Ovaro. “Three to go,” he said.
20
The Black Hills covered a lot of territory. Thousands of square miles, Fargo had heard. Even narrowing down the area where the white buffalo might be to the western half left a lot of ground to cover.
Fortunately, the Black Hills were not all hills. There was rolling grassland where buffalo grazed and wallowed, and Fargo was willing to bet every dollar in his poke that that was where he would find the white buff.
The problem, though, was that the grassy tracts were widely scattered. He couldn’t check all of them in one night. Or seven nights. His best bet was to cover as much ground as he could and hope for a stroke of luck.
Fargo was a big believer in Fair Lady Chance. She often favored him at cards, and she certainly liked to toss ladies in his lap. A friend of his once said that he was born under a lucky star. Fargo wouldn’t go that far, but he would admit that nine times out of ten, luck worked in his favor. As any gambler would confirm, those were uncommonly high odds.
Still, Fargo couldn’t stop worrying. If he didn’t find Keever in time, open warfare would break out. The Lakotas and other tribes would be incensed. To them a white buff was a symbol of all that was good. When they found out a white man was to blame for the calf’s death, they would join forces and rise up in a wave of slaughter the likes of which the West had never seen. Hundreds would die.
Unless Fargo stopped Keever.
So Fargo rode. He rode hard. He pushed the Ovaro as if their lives depended on it. He was alert for sounds or the telltale glow of a campfire. But on the one night he most needed Lady Chance to smile on him, she was over at a corner table playing roulette with someone else.
The notion brought a weary chuckle to Fargo’s lips. He still had his sense of humor.
The minutes added up into hours and the hours crawled toward dawn. A pink blush decorated the eastern horizon when Fargo drew rein on a flattop hill and gazed in all directions. Disappointment left a bitter taste in his mouth. He had tried and he had failed. Soon it would be daylight, and Senator Fulton Keever would add another trophy to his wall.
Fargo swore. He considered going to his friend Four Horns and asking his help. The only thing was, he had no idea where to find Four Horns’ village.
It seemed like everything was against him.
Then a thin golden crown framed the rim of the world, and the gloom of night was relieved by the gray of dawn. Fargo arched his stiff back, and yawned. He was all set to ride on when, far in the distance, he saw four- legged sticks. His pulse quickening, he rose in the stirrups. There were three of them. They were too far off to tell much but it had to be Keever and the brat and Owen.
Fargo fought down a burst of elation. They were miles away. Overtaking them before they shot the buff was asking for a miracle.
“Sorry, big fella,” Fargo said as he pricked the Ovaro with his spurs. “I know you’re tuckered out.”
The golden crown became a ring and the ring became a yellow plate. All around, the shadows of night were dispelled by the spreading light of the new day.
Fargo came out of the woods to the belt of grass where he had seen the riders. He slowed and twisted in the saddle, desperate for some sign. But there was nothing, nothing at all.
A rifle boomed and a leaden bee buzzed his ear. Another inch over, and the grass would have been spattered with his brains.
Fargo reined around and streaked toward the woods. He wasn’t worried so much for his own hide as for the Ovaro’s; the smart thing for the shooter to do was to bring the stallion down.
Again the rifle banged but the rifleman rushed his shot and the slug clipped the stallion’s flying mane.
Fargo glanced over his shoulder. A puff of gun smoke let him know the rifleman was hidden in the high grass. Drawing his Colt, he fired three times. He didn’t expect to draw blood. He wanted the man to hug dirt long enough for the Ovaro to reach safety.
It worked.
Swinging down, Fargo shucked the Henry. He darted from trunk to trunk until he was at the last one. Cautiously, he peered around, and nearly lost the top of his head to a shot that left a deep furrow in the tree and peppered him with slivers of bark.
“Almost got you that time, didn’t I?” Owen shouted, and cackled.
Fargo took his hat off and set it on the ground. “Where did the senator get to?” He had a notion Keever left Owen there to keep him busy while Keever went after the white buffalo.
“He’s up ahead a ways,” Owen replied. “To get to him you have to get past me.”
“Is he paying you extra for this?” Fargo kept him talking while peeking out again.
“As a matter of fact, he is. Two hundred to keep you from interfering. Five hundred if I blow out your wick.”
“A lot of gents have tried.”
Owen laughed again. “Haven’t you heard? There’s a first time for everything.”
Fargo saw grass move sixty yards out. Owen was changing position. He took a bead low to the ground, and fired. A startled oath greeted the shot.
“Damn you! That pretty near got me in the hip.”
“I’ll try harder next time.” Fargo worked the lever, feeding another cartridge into the chamber. The Henry held fifteen in the tubular magazine under the barrel. As folks liked to say, you could load a Henry on Sunday and shoot it all week.
The grass was moving again.
“You could make this easy on both of us,” Owen hollered. “You could get on that fine animal of yours and light a shuck. No one will ever know.”
“Except me.” Fargo wedged the stock to his shoulder. All he needed was a gap in the grass.
“Damn it. Be reasonable. What’s the white buff to you?”
“To the Indians it means a lot.”
“Why are you so bothered about a bunch of savages? And so what if they get upset? It’s just a buffalo, for God’s sake. Another white one will come along in ten or twenty years and they can make a fuss over it.”
“Lichen is dead, you know.”
The grass stopped moving. “I figured as much. You told me that to make me mad, didn’t you? Hoping I’d jump up like an idiot and start spraying lead. But I’m not that stupid.”
“Stupid enough.” Fargo had discerned a vague shape that might or might not be Owen. He thumbed back the hammer, took precise aim, and lightly stroked the trigger.